Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase for Dividend Investors

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Four supply chain stocks to purchase offer a way for dividend investors to seek shelter from the growing problem of parts arriving in time for manufacturers to keep pace with demand for their products.

The four supply chain stocks to purchase for dividend investors amid delays and shortages in delivering parts to manufacturers became the focus of a Sept. 23 research report by BoA Global Research. One stock gained attention for executing its business plan particularly well, two others won praise from BoA as “quality” companies and the fourth features a household name that should escape much damage.

Income investors who like the four supply chain stocks to purchase should be mindful that even these recommended companies are not immune from such problems, but they seem better able than most others to dodge the big blows. Fortunately, the market appears to have stabilized after heavy selling last Monday once the Federal Open Market Committee issued a benign Sept. 22 statement that it would stay ready to tweak its stance of monetary policy, as appropriate, if risks emerge that could impede meeting its goals of full employment and keeping inflation at an average of 2%, while monitoring readings on public health, labor market conditions, inflationary pressures and expectations, and financial and international developments.

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Equity markets worldwide dropped further from its ongoing slide in September, said Bryan Perry, who heads the high-yield-focused Cash Machine investment newsletter and the Premium Income, Quick Income Trader, Breakout Profits Alert and Hi-Tech Trader services. The retreat stems from concerns about persistent global supply chain disruptions, a possible default by China’s second-largest property developer, Evergrande, possible Fed policy changes and problems in containing the Delta variant of COVID-19 that could combine to fan inflationary winds, he added.

These collective fears come as investors seem to expect a correction after 11 straight months without a pullback of more than 3%, Perry advised his Premium Income subscribers on Sept. 21. The NYSE advance and decline lines also have weakened since June and key large-cap stocks have done most of the heavy lifting to sustain the rally since then, he cautioned.

Paul Dykewicz interviews Bryan Perry.

Inflation Could Affect Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase, Market Watcher Warns

“Higher inflation means rising input costs, and rising input costs can cause pernicious margin compression,” cautioned Jim Woods, editor of the Successful Investing and Intelligence Report newsletters, as well as the chief of the Bullseye Stock Trader advisory service. “As investors, we need to look at companies that can weather rising costs the most.”

Woods addressed the supply chain dilemma in his October 2021 issue of Intelligence Report. Woods, a Wall Street veteran, also shared strategies for income investors to avoid the worst of the supply chain fallout and the risk of inflation.

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Paul Dykewicz discusses investments with Jim Woods, editor of Intelligence Report.

The United States is now seeing first mile problems involving unloading containers, booking transport, etc., BoA wrote in its Sept. 23 research note. This situation will ripple through U.S. supply chains, with the worst damage likely occurring in this year’s fourth quarter and the first quarter of 2022, the investment firm added. As for Christmas, retailers and consumers alike may be facing some empty shelves.

Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase for Dividend Investors Include Industrial Manufacturer Dover

One of the four supply chain stocks that BoA touted in its Sept. 23 report featured Dover Corp. (NYSE: DOV), a Downers Grove, Illinois-based manufacturer of industrial products. The company received a buy recommendation and a $190 price objective from BoA on the strength of a 17x enterprise value (EV) / earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) multiple of the investment firm’s 2022 estimates.

BoA’s target multiple actually is at a discount to multi-industrial peers trading at 21x 2021 estimates, but the investment firm wrote its relatively modest valuation is fair due to Dover’s lower EBITDA margins. Risks that could halt Dover from attaining the price objective of $190 that BoA set include waning U.S. industrial production; not achieving expected returns from organic investments or acquisitions; and slower-than-expected margin improvement.

Dover not only is growing well organically but through acquisitions. On Sept. 15, Dover announced it completed a previously disclosed acquisition of the Espy Corporation, which will become part of the Microwave Products Group (MPG) within Dover’s Engineered Products segment. Espy designs and manufactures advanced electronic radio frequency sensor systems to detect, record, analyze and geolocate signals.

Just outside of Austin, Texas, Espy offers complete signal intelligence systems with integrated software that is sold globally. Espy’s proprietary machine learning and real-time geolocation technology, together with its software interface, greatly reduce the time needed to identify and process signals of interest while providing high accuracy on the signal’s origin.

One of the Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase Boosts Its Dividend

Dover’s board of directors on Aug. 5 increased the company’s quarterly cash dividend to $0.50 per share, up from $0.495 per share, to mark the 66th straight year in which the company has boosted its payout. The jump shows Dover’s longstanding policy of returning capital to shareholders.

For the second quarter ended June 30, Dover generated revenue of $2.0 billion, an increase of 36%, compared to second-quarter 2020. Organic growth accounted for 83.33% of the overall gain.

Dover reported Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) net earnings for second-quarter 2021 of $265 million, up 112% from the comparable quarter a year ago. The company’s diluted earnings per share (EPS) of $1.82 on a GAAP basis rose 112%. On an adjusted basis, net earnings of $299 million in Q2 2021 increased 82% and adjusted diluted EPS of $2.06 was also up 82% versus the comparable quarter of the prior year.

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

CEO of One of the Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase Boasts of Backlog

“We performed well again this quarter as new order activity remained strong and margin improvement continued its solid trajectory across all segments,” said Richard J. Tobin, Dover’s president and chief executive officer. “Our portfolio is performing above pre-pandemic levels in terms of revenue and margin, and our record-high backlog provides visibility into the second half of the year and in some of our businesses into 2022.

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“During the quarter, we saw top-line growth across all of our segments, with the largest contributions to the year-over-year increase from pumps and process solutions, fueling solutions, food retail, marking & coding and the automotive aftermarket businesses. We are encouraged by the demand growth in compressor components, foodservice, and textile printing, and we expect continued recovery in these markets over the balance of the year.

“Our teams have done a commendable job in the first half navigating logistics bottlenecks, component and labor shortages, and cost inflation to meet end market demand and drive solid margin conversion. Our forecast for the balance of the year reflects the expectation that logistics constraints and input cost inflation will neither deteriorate nor improve materially. Despite this dynamic, we believe that our localized manufacturing and sourcing strategy and diverse business mix give us distinct advantages to win in the current demand environment.”

For second-half 2021, Dover’s leadership offered optimism about maintaining “robust backlog levels.” The company’s management also expressed confidence about executing operationally to drive portfolio profitability enough to issue heightened full-year revenue and earnings per share (EPS) guidance.

Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase Attract Attention from Pension Chairman

“The supply chain problems are going to continue for some time,” said Bob Carlson, chairman of the Board of Trustees of Virginia’s Fairfax County Employees’ Retirement System with more than $4 billion in assets. “In this environment it’s important to invest in companies with high-quality management and long histories of surviving different environments.”

Dover is a good example, said Carlson, who leads the Retirement Watch investment newsletter. Carlson noted Dover’s rising dividend policy and long track record of returning cash to its shareholders.

“Supply chain management is critical to companies these days,” Carlson said. “The economy is booming, yet in the latest earnings season many companies are forecasting lower revenues and earnings. The lower forecasts are due mostly to lost sales and higher costs caused by supply problems.”

Pension fund and Retirement Watch chief Bob Carlson answers queries from Paul Dykewicz.

Electronic Instruments Maker Joins Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase

AMETEK Inc. (NYSE: AME), a Berwyn, Pennsylvania-based maker of electronic instruments and electromechanical devices, gained a recommendation from BoA, too. The manufacturer’s Electronic Instruments consist of advanced analytical, test and measurement products for the energy, aerospace, power, research, medical and industrial markets, while its Electromechanical devices feature automation and precision motion control solutions, highly engineered electrical interconnects, specialty metals and thermal management systems.

For the second quarter ended June 30, AMETEK’s sales reached a record $1.39 billion, a 37% spike from the second quarter of 2020, with organic sales surging 25%. Operating income increased 39% to a record $316.6 million and operating margins touched 22.8%, up 40 basis points over the prior-year period.

On a GAAP basis, second-quarter earnings per diluted share were $1.00. Adjusted earnings reached a record $1.15 per diluted share, up 37% versus the prior year’s adjusted results. Adjusted earnings add back non-cash, after-tax, acquisition-related intangible amortization of $0.15 per diluted share.

“Sales growth and operating performance were exceptionally strong, while earnings exceeded our expectations,” said David A. Zapico, AMETEK Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. “Order growth remains robust and broad-based resulting in a record $2.5 billion in backlog. Additionally, our businesses generated outstanding levels of cash flow with free cash flow conversion a strong 114% of net income.”

AMETEK’s Growth Shows Why It Is Among Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase

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Following AMETEK’s second quarter results, it increased its guidance for the year. Overall sales are expected to rise approximately 20% with organic sales up approximately 10%. Adjusted earnings per diluted share are pegged to be in the range of $4.62 to $4.68, up 17% to 18% over 2020, rising from AMETEK’s previous guidance range of $4.48 to $4.56 per diluted share.

“We expect overall sales in the third quarter to be up in the mid-20% range compared to the third quarter of 2020. Adjusted earnings per diluted share are anticipated to be in the range of $1.16 to $1.18, up 15% to 17% over the same period in 2020,” concluded Zapico.

BoA based its $165 price objective on a 23x EV/EBITDA multiple of its 2022 estimates for AMETEK. The target of 23x multiple is at a premium to the peer average trading on 2021E of 22x, which BoA views as fair given the company’s higher margins, strong cost control and cyclical operating leverage. Risks to meeting that price objective are: weaker industrial production trends; a slowing pace of acquisitions; and any disruption in the ongoing relocation of labor to low-cost countries.

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

Fortive Forges Way onto List of Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase

Everett, Washington-based Fortive Corporation (NYSE: FTV), a diversified industrial technology conglomerate spun off from Danaher in July 2016, won a recommendation from BoA as a provider of technologies for connected workflow solutions across a range of markets. Fortive’s strategic segments of Intelligent Operating Solutions, Precision Technologies and Advanced Healthcare Solutions include brands with leading positions in their markets.

The company’s businesses design, develop, service, manufacture and market professional and engineered products, software and services. Fortive employs more than 17,000 research and development, manufacturing, sales, distribution, service and administrative team members in 50-plus countries.

Plus, Fortive reported on Sept. 1 that it completed its previously announced acquisition of ServiceChannel Holdings Inc. to become an operating company within its own Intelligent Operating Solutions (IOS) segment. ServiceChannel, with more than 500 enterprise customers in over 70 countries, is a global provider of SaaS-based multi-site facilities maintenance service solutions with an integrated service-provider network of 70,000-plus facilities maintenance service providers.

“The transaction adds another differentiated, high-growth SaaS asset with an attractive runway to drive increasing profitability and free cash flow, and generate strong returns over the next five years, said James Lico, Fortive’s president and chief executive officer. “As we look ahead, we have significant capacity and opportunity for additional capital allocation which will continue to strengthen the portfolio and drive double-digit earnings and free cash flow growth over the long-term.”

Fortive’s second-quarter results, ended July 2, produced a 26.7% climb in revenues from continuing operations to reach $1.3 billion, compared to the same quarter a year ago. For Q2 2021, adjusted net earnings from continuing operations were $238.8 million. Diluted net earnings per share from continuing operations for the second quarter, ended July 2, were $0.48. For the same period, adjusted diluted net earnings per share from continuing operations were $0.66.

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

BoA gave Fortive a $85 price objective, based on a 23x EV/EBITDA multiple of 2022 EBITDA estimates. The investment firm wrote its target multiple is in line with the peer average of 23x on 2021 estimate. Potential risks to Fortive attaining the price target are a weaker-than-expected capex cycle; redeploying cash into accretive acquisitions; and further strengthening of the U.S. dollar.

Honeywell Gains Spot as One of Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase for Income Investors

Honeywell International Inc. (NASAQ: HON), a Charlotte, North Carolina-based provider of aerospace and building technologies, performance materials and technologies and safety and productivity solutions, earned a “buy” recommendation from BoA. The investment firm’s $270 price objective is based on 20x 2022E EV/EBITDA.

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The target multiple is at a premium to peers trading at 18x EV/EBITDA on 2021 estimates, BoA wrote. The investment firm opined that a premium is warranted given a more defensive portfolio yielding resilient margins and above average EPS growth.

Potential risks to the BoA price objective on Honeywell are acquisitions, specifically if Honeywell overpays for deals in the pursuit of diversifying and expanding into new, faster-growing adjacent markets; unforeseen future sales slowdowns due to economic pressures; and execution around ongoing simplification efforts.

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

Power Management Company Starts to Face Supply Chain Challenges
Eaton Corp. PLC (NYSE: ETN), a Dublin, Ireland-based diversified power management company, gained a buy recommendation from BoA but did not win a spot among the four supply chain stocks to purchase. The company has been in operation for more than 100 years and its business units include electrical products, electrical systems and services, aerospace, vehicles and, most recently, e-mobility.

Eaton’s mission is to improve the quality of life and the environment by using power management technologies and services. The company provides sustainable solutions to help its customers effectively manage electrical, hydraulic and mechanical power safely, efficiently and reliably. Eaton sells products to customers in more than 175 countries.

Sales in the second quarter of 2021 reached $5.2 billion, up 35% from the second quarter of 2020. The increase consisted of 27% growth in organic sales, 5% growth from acquisitions and 3% from positive currency translation, the company reported.

Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase for Investors Omit Eaton

Craig Arnold, Eaton’s chairman and chief executive officer, said when reporting the results that the company built on the momentum from its first quarter. Subsequently, Eaton began have supply chain challenges.

“We delivered record second-quarter adjusted earnings per share and segment margins, and organic sales were slightly above the midpoint of our guidance range, despite supply chain constraints impacting many of our businesses, Arnold said. “We are pleased with how well our businesses are executing in this environment.”

The company’s supply chain management undertakes “rigorous annual examination” to identify and mitigate a broad spectrum of supply chain risks, Eaton added.

Eaton Not Included Among Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase By Dividend Investors

Nonetheless, Arnold recently reported revenue for the third quarter will be reduced because needed parts are not arriving on time. He specifically mentioned its MasterCraft business is having supply-chain problems.

“Those problems seem to be reflected in ETN’s stock price,” Carlson said.

Even so, Eaton is seeing strong demand for its renewable power generation and vehicle electrification equipment, Carlson continued. Sales growth should be strong for at least the next few years, he added.

“The supply chain problems are going to continue for some time,” Carlson said. “In this environment it’s important to invest in companies with high-quality management and long histories of surviving different environments.”

BoA gave Eaton a $195 price objective on a 20x enterprise value EV/ EBITDA multiple based on the investment firm’s 2022 estimates. The target multiple is at a premium to the 18x peer average on 2021 estimates but the valuation is warranted due to expected upside from cyclical operating leverage, strong margin performance and Eaton’s less cyclical portfolio mix, BoA added.

Downside risks to BoA’s price target for Eaton are a worse-than-expected global industrial recession, especially in commercial construction; mergers and acquisitions due to the need for availability of synergistic targets and a company’s ability to integrate. Another risk to watch is the trajectory of the recovery in automotive and aerospace end markets.

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

U.S. Census Bureau Warns of Supply Chain Concerns

The U.S. Census Bureau conducts a weekly Small Business Pulse Survey measuring the effect of changing business conditions during COVID-19 on the nation’s small businesses and found 67% of small businesses in manufacturing are facing domestic supplier delays, above the 42% national average. Manufacturing businesses are seeing delays from foreign suppliers, production and shipping versus other sectors.

The percentage of respondents reporting supply chain issues has almost doubled from the prior year, the bureau reported. It seems supply chain constraints have eased a bit in August but remain challenging.

Delta Variant of COVID-19 Still May Affect Four Four Supply Chain Stocks to Purchase

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The Delta variant of COVID-19 has proven to be highly transmissible and is raising concerns from health experts about the spread of the virus. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is blaming the variant for recent spikes in case numbers and deaths.

However, the variant also is leading a rise in the number of people vaccinated against COVID-19. As of Sept. 24, 212,255,202 people, or 64.1% of the U.S. population, have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. The fully vaccinated total 182,958,696 people, or 55.1%, of the U.S. population, according to the CDC.

COVID-19 cases worldwide, as of Sept. 24, total 231,081,978 and led to 4,736,551 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University. U.S. COVID-19 cases hit 42,844,322 and caused 686,934 deaths. America has the dreaded distinction as the country with the most COVID-19 cases and deaths.

The four supply chain stocks to purchase by dividend investors focus on businesses that so far are mitigating the problem of delayed parts that is causing many other industrial companies to scramble for solutions.

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Paul Dykewicz

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Paul Dykewicz

Paul Dykewicz, www.pauldykewicz.com, is a respected, award-winning journalist who has written for Dow Jones, the Wall Street JournalInvestor’s Business DailyUSA Today, the Journal of Commerce, Crain Communications, Seeking Alpha, Guru Focus and other publications and websites. Paul can be followed on Twitter @PaulDykewicz, and is the editor and a columnist at StockInvestor.com and DividendInvestor.com. He also serves as editorial director of Eagle Financial Publications in Washington, D.C., where he edits monthly investment newsletters, time-sensitive trading alerts, free weekly e-letters and other investment reports.

Paul is the author of an inspirational book, “Holy Smokes! Golden Guidance from Notre Dame’s Championship Chaplain,” with a foreword by former national championship-winning football coach Lou Holtz. In addition, Paul serves as a commentator about investing, economics, business news, politics and motivational guidance. 

Paul earned a master’s degree in business administration with a focus on finance at Baltimore’s Johns Hopkins University, where he was elected to two terms as president of its Finance Club. He earlier received a master’s degree from Michigan State University’s School of Journalism, where he was inducted into the Kappa Tau Alpha honor society. Paul received a bachelor’s degree from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, focusing on political science, business and economics.

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