We were fortunate to meet with
the management teams of 16 major
companies from offshore drillers like
Transocean, to oil field services provider
Dresser-Rand. We also spoke
directly to Exploration & Production
companies. In a nutshell this is what
we are communicating:
-
Off-shore.Poised to accelerate in
2015.
-
Mid-stream(pipelines). Strong
expansion continues to get
upstream energy supplies to market.
-
Refineries.Because of condensate
export approvals, expect rising
demand for new, modern, LNG/
LPG tankers and infrastructure.
Our writing through August pointed
out rising geopolitical issues — Russia,
Ukraine in particular — and how it will
drive rising European defense spending
over time.
We did not anticipate that Saudi Arabia
would deal with ISIS, Iran, and Russian
challenges with its No. 1 weapon:
oil production
Extended timeline for Oil & Gas
- Click image to enlarge
November 2014, Oil ~ $75: Houston,
we have a problem
At this juncture it became clear the
Saudis would maintain production to
crush oil price. The only debate was
whether they were going after Putin
/ Iran (our view) or U.S. fracking (a la
Prince Alwaweed). Either way, we were
early in saying lower oil price is bad
for the sector and that 2015 oil related
capital spending would be significantly
lower with this passage:
“Netting it all out though, oil price
down (25%) = (25%) lower industry
revenue = bad for you. Most of your customer
base is claiming it will have little
impact. They are wrong.”
February, 2015, Oil ~ $50: Oil
slick, currency headwinds challenge
growth
- Click image to enlarge
The general consensus is about a
(25%) reduction in 2015 capital spending,
which seems right but can worsen
in 2016 should oil price not recover.
March, 2015, Oil ~ $50: Oil slick,
currency headwinds worsen
The general consensus remains
for a (25%) reduction in 2015 capital
spending by global oil companies, but
those forecasts implicitly assume at
least some recovery in oil price from
curtailed exploration activity. Unfortunately,
cuts in natural gas fracturing
— even 4%–6% in a week — do not
boost oil price.
One month ago WTI (West Texas
Intermediate) was at a “depressed”
$52. Now we are looking at $45; expect
more capital spending cuts.
May, 2015, Oil ~ $60: Slow growth
ahead; farm belt can’t help
The Saudis continue to step on the
gas, driving and keeping prices low;
and as a result North American capital
spending continues to decline.
Huge capex cuts in upstream exploration
and production drove a number
of weak first quarter results for industrial
companies, and we see no respite
for the next two to four quarters before
stabilizing at a lower spending level.
July, 2015, Oil ~ $50: Kind of sluggish
Oil had rallied from about $50 to $60
over the past month (I like round numbers)
but have since round tripped. Expect
further, deeper capital spending
cuts in the U.S. oil sector to continue
affecting demand for large capital
equipment.
Assuming Iranian oil comes back
into the global market, prices will be
further pressured. We continue to see
negative comps for the next two to four
quarters before stabilizing at lower
spending levels.
Opportunities remain. Low commodity
prices hurt commodity producers
and their equipment suppliers
— but also benefit these major
sectors:
- Aerospace
- Auto production
- Non-residential construction
- Residential construction
- Consumer discretionary
Construction equipment is getting
hit near-term (equipment flowing out
of L&G sector), but on the flip side
lower raw material prices make large
construction projects more affordable.
We anticipate no substantive improvement
in manufacturing activity.Not in the U.S., nor internationally.
Headwinds include oil price and commodities
in general (down), and the
U.S. dollar (up). Expect further, deeper
capital spending cuts in the U.S. oil
sector to continue affecting demand
for large capital equipment.
China’s stock market meltdown
is their problem, not our problem.China’s stock market rocketed upward
on fundamentals — not economic acceleration
— and the opposite is now
true. In fact, China has proven a weak
market for commodities and capital
equipment for some time. Shown here
is Caterpillar’s “core” revenue trend for
Asia Pacific over the past two and a half
years:
Construction equipment weakness
reflects excess supply and possibly
market share loss in China; Resource
Industries ties more closely to Australia/
NZ but indirectly also reflects China.
The weakness is broad-based; Rockwell
Automation core Asia Pacific
revenue has remained at or below 5
percent since June 2014 and United
Technologies’ Otis Elevator unit has reported
flat or down China elevator orders
for the last five quarters. The point
is that the weakness is old news, while
the headlines are about their capital
market excesses.
The rest of the world is hardly doing
great — updated outlook for key
geographic regions:
U.S. remains the safe, modest
growth bet.Weakness abounds in
commodity-related sectors — e.g. oil,
coal, and farm equipment — but fundamentals
remain positive for nonresidential
construction, consumer
durables (auto, housing) boosted by
gradually improving employment.
Europe.The weaker Euro benefits
exports, lower commodity prices and
slowing China growth are headwinds.
Life will go on. Modest growth will
continue.
Middle East.Right now, Saudis are
investing to keep their mature fields
working; incremental growth in defense
spending is likely.
Latin America.Mexico continues
to grow, and capital investment in the
auto and aerospace sectors remains
strong. Brazil, Argentina — much of
the region — is toast.
China.No longer a huge growth
market for outside players. Costs, business
risk, and military belligerence are
up and the mask is off. I do expect the
nation’s economy will grow 5–7 percent
— but with greater wealth capture
from domestic players. It will still be a
good place to do business, but not a
great place to do business.
The End Market Picture is
Likewise Mixed
Oil & Gas.We believe it is going to get
worse.
Mining.Awful, plunging toward hideous.
Power generation.Sounds like GE
will be able to close on Alstom deal.
Devil is in the details regarding what
they must to concede. Supplier memo:
Have your helmet on and the chinstrap
fastened for that upcoming “partnership”
discussion.
Transportation infrastructure.More stability through 2016–2017 with,
perhaps, modest growth. I remain convinced
that lower oil prices will lessen
the growth profile for oil shipped by
rail. Conversely, a new President in
2017, low commodity prices (steel, cement,
energy), and dilapidated infrastructure
would, you think, be a growth
catalyst. Let us hope.
Machinery.Everything ex-truck
stinks. Construction equipment is soft,
agriculture will remain weak and mining
is hideous. Only silver lining — and
not enough to off-set — is growth in
non-residential and residential construction.
Consumer (auto, appliances).Same story; auto benefitting from old
cars, improving employment and capital
investment in Mexico. Residential
construction growth should help appliances.
Aerospace / Defense.Global commercial
aircraft demand is rock solid
driven by economic growth, low fuel
prices and strong capital markets. Cargo
is also picking up. One offset is that
Boeing 747 orders remain weak and
there is chatter about the program’s future
as the world demands more narrow
body and the A380 makes inroads.
Defense spending has troughed in the
U.S. and international growth strikes
us as likely though with little benefit to
the U.S. industrial base.
Focus Company: AGCO (ACGO)
AGCO is a distant No. 2 in North
American farm equipment behind
John Deere and is far more leveraged
to global conditions. As such weaker
U.S. demand is more of an annoyance
than huge challenge. Operationally,
the company has succeeded in driving
North American margin to 10 percent
or better in two of the last three years.
Still, weak conditions are also a
challenge for AGCO, particularly as
S. American operations are suffering
and the strong dollar has hurt currency
translation back to the company.
We just returned from meetings at
the Farm Progress Show in Decatur,
IL, including a presentation and booth
tour by Bob Crain, SVP & general manager
for the Americas. There was silver
lining, given low crop prices and
excess dealer inventory. The key takeaway
was that while dealer inventory
was down (12 percent) y/y as of end of
July with production cuts and targeted
marketing programs planned to make
further reduction.
Finally, whole farm sector is under
the weather — and in North America
that includes Deere, AGCO and CNH
Industrial — all of which cite excess
inventory and lower used prices.
None see a rebound in 2016. And neither
do we.
About Author
Brian K. Langenberg,
CFA, has been recognized
as a member of the
Institutional Investor All-
America Research Team, a
Wall Street Journal All-Star,
and Forbes/Starmine (#1
earnings estimator for
industrials). Langenberg
speaks and meets regularly with CEOs and
senior executives of companies with over $1
trillion in global revenue. His team publishes the
Quarterly Earnings Monitor/Survey — gathering
intelligence and global insight to support
decision-making. You can reach him at Brian@
Langenberg-llc.com or his website at www.
Langenberg-LLC.com.