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| | Jubak's Journal 5 stocks for the next spending surge
With consumers tapped, business spending will have to keep the economy moving. And these companies are best positioned to benefit.
By Jim Jubak
Can you hear the worry? Suddenly the economy is sounding a few sour notes about growth in 2006.
And the increasingly important question is "Will business spending be strong enough to keep the economy growing at 3% or better in 2006?
On Tuesday, the Federal Reserve sounded as clear a note of concern about economic growth as it ever sounds about anything. In the statement issued by the Federal Open Market Committee announcing the latest one-quarter percentage point increase in short-term interest rates, the committee said, "Although recent economic data have been uneven, the expansion in economic activity appears solid."
That's a decidedly more qualified vote of confidence than the committee issued after its Dec. 13 meeting: "Despite elevated energy prices and hurricane-related disruptions, the expansion in economic activity appears solid."
The difference is a single report on GDP growth issued on Jan. 27. Economic growth in the fourth quarter of 2005 was just 1.1%, the U.S. Commerce Department reported. That was well below forecasts of 2.8% growth and way, way below the 4.1% average growth in the previous 10 quarters.
Consumers take a breather One reason for the slow growth: a big slowdown in the growth of consumer spending to 1.1%, a four-year low. That had been expected by economists, however. Higher energy prices and higher interest rates on home mortgages have damped the flow of money going into consumers' pockets from mortgage refinancings and home equity loans. And that, economists and the Federal Reserve have been predicting for months, would eventually reduce the growth rate of consumer spending. "Eventually" may have arrived with the December quarter.
But another cause for the lower-than-expected growth in the quarter wasn't expected. Business investment grew by just 2.8% in the quarter. That's less than a third of the growth rate over the last two-and-a-half years.
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That lower-than-expected growth is a big deal because those who believe the economy can keep on growing at better than 3% in 2006 have been counting on business spending to pick up the slack. The argument sounded logical: U.S. capital spending bottomed in 2003, after the bursting of the technology bubble in 2000 -- and has been on the rebound ever since. In the four quarters prior to the fourth quarter of 2005, growth in business spending averaged 8.4% a quarter.
And, the argument went on, growth in business spending certainly hasn't topped out. In fact, according to Morgan Stanley, growth in business spending in this recovery is only about 75% of the average in a recovery. In many industries, investment has lagged for years or even decades -- in mining, for example -- leaving a pent-up need for more investment. That, the pro-growth camp argued, would be enough to keep growth rates high.
Hey, big spenders I think that argument still has a lot going for it -- in spite of the fourth-quarter numbers, which are, remember, just the initial read on growth for the quarter and subject to substantial revision. The biggest drop in business spending was for transportation equipment -- and since purchases in this sector tend to be big and lumpy, the drop may just be a timing issue. Boeing (BA, news, msgs), the biggest single contributor to this category, has reported shipments in the first quarter of 2006 that make a bounce back in business-spending growth likely.
The most likely scenario for 2006 is still a slowdown from the 4% growth rate of recent quarters as consumer spending does slow. Consumer spending makes up about 70% of GDP and business spending is just 17%, so even a big jump in business spending probably wouldn't be enough to prevent the economy from showing some slowdown. (Consumer spending itself may not have slowed as much as the December quarter numbers indicate: A big drop in auto sales drove down the results for the quarter, but sales now seem to have leveled off.) But a lower economic growth rate wouldn't be anything out of the ordinary for an economic expansion now more than four years old. All of which points investors looking for growth to companies that will get the biggest bang out of any strength in business spending in 2006.
On my regular Wednesday appearance on CNBC's "Morning Call," I picked these three business-investment specialists:
Belden CDT (BDC, news, msgs). Belden has more visibility than most wire and cable makers because it's a big player in the consumer market for cables to connect computers, printers, televisions and other electronic devices. But the bulk of the company's sales go to industrial customers for use in distributing video, audio, digital, and optical signals. It is exposure to that market that makes Belden CDT, formed in 2004 through a merger of Belden and Cable Design Technologies, a play on business investment. Many Wall Street analysts think that 2006 will be the year when spending on information technology by corporate customers finally takes off again. Belden would be a big supplier of the nuts and bolts of information technology in such an expansion. Investors can expect three things from the company in 2006: 1) decent top-line revenue growth of about 5%; 2) increasing gross margins (to 24% in 2006 from 23% in 2005, Standard & Poor's estimates) that push operating margins higher by about two percentage points; and 3) a continued reduction in interest expense as the company reduces debt. Wall Street figures that all adds up to 31% earnings growth in 2006. The stock now trades at 16 times projected 2006 earnings per share. Our StockScouter rates these shares a 7 out of a possible 10.
CommScope (CTV, news, msgs). CommScope's 2004 purchase of Avaya's (AV, news, msgs) networking-solutions business shifted the company from cable vendor to data networker. That has expanded the company's total market and put the stock into a group that typically receives a higher stock market multiple. It will take a while for the company to earn that higher multiple, but 2006 will bring important progress. Right now CommScope trades at a 20% discount to its industry. That's reasonable, as the company's gross margins are about 26% below the industry average. But 2006 should see gross margins improve by at least one percentage point, closing the gap and pushing multiples higher. Wall Street currently projects 2006 earnings growth of 27%. The stock now trades at 18 times projected 2006 earnings per share. Our StockScouter rates these shares a 7 out of a possible 10.
NCI Building Systems (NCS, news, msgs). If a business expands, it's got to put the new people, equipment and product somewhere, and that somewhere is often a metal building manufactured by NCI Building Systems. (The company's other two divisions are metal components and metal-coil coating.) In the fourth quarter, which ended in October 2005, the company saw revenues climb by 7% to set a new company record. But even more important, the increased sales volumes pushed capacity utilization to the 70% to 75% level, from 65% in the September quarter. That, in turn, pushed operating margins in the company's buildings division to 16% from 12% in the earlier period. Free cash flow climbed to $109 million in fiscal 2005 from $34 million in fiscal 2004. For fiscal 2006, management is projecting a 5% increase in the non-residential construction square footage sold. The stock now trades at 16 times projected fiscal 2006 earnings per share. Our StockScouter rates the shares an 8 out of a possible 10.
And as always I have two "exclusive" picks for readers of CNBC.com on MSN Money.
Chicago Bridge and Iron (CBI, news, msgs) This engineering and construction company is a likely leader in the buildout of the global energy infrastructure over the next decade. The company's backlog for projects jumped to $3.1 billion at the end of the second quarter of 2005, up from $1.5 billion at the end of the second quarter of 2004. Since that second-quarter earnings report, the company has announced in excess of $270 million in new project awards. (The numbers lag so badly because the company has delayed filing its third-quarter financials with the Securities and Exchange Commission while it investigates internal accounting on some construction contracts.) Wall Street now estimates earnings growth of 30% in 2006. The stock trades at 25 times projected 2006 earnings per share. Our StockScouter does not rate these shares.
General Cable (BGC, news, msgs). Wall Street projects earnings growth for General Cable of 27% in 2006, pretty good growth for a stock trading at just 22 times projected 2006 earnings per share. But I think that estimate is likely to be low for 2006. Plans to upgrade the electricity grid -- General Cable is the largest domestic producer of electric utility cables -- and the continuing buildout of the telecom network will, in my opinion, drive growth in 2006 above that estimate. Copper prices have climbed 19% in the fourth quarter, so fast that the company might not be able to recoup costs through price increases in a single quarter, but over the full course of 2006, I think the company can keep margins steady. Our StockScouter rates these shares a 9 out of a possible 10.
Editor's Note: A new Jubaks Journal is posted every Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday. Please note that Jubak's Picks recommendations are for a 12-to-18 month time horizon. See Jubak's CNBC Picks for shorter six month recommendations. For suggestions to help navigate the treacherous interest-rate environment see Jim's new portfolio Dividend stocks for income investors. For picks with a truly long-term perspective see Jubak's 50 best stocks in the world or Future Fantastic 50 Portfolio.
E-mail Jim Jubak at jjmail@microsoft.com.
At the time of publication, Jim Jubak owned or controlled shares in the following equities mentioned in this column: Chicago Bridge and Iron and General Cable. He doesn't own short positions in any stock mentioned in this column.
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