Companies with international operations are set to take advantage of a global economic recovery in 2010 continuing the rally that began in 2009.
Companies with international operations are set to take advantage of a global economic recovery in 2010 continuing the rally that began in 2009.
As the new decade begins, industrial and material companies could be set for the biggest yearly gains as the world's emerging markets rapidly build infrastructure. Companies that sell consumer staples worldwide should also benefit from growth.
"Industrials will continue to perform, largely because of international operations," said Michael Farr, CEO of Farr, Miller & Washington and manager of the Touchstone Capital Appreciation Fund. Growth in countries such as China and India will push demand higher for manufactured goods, he said.
Such demand helped markets in 2009. The Standard & Poor's 500 index is poised to end the year with a nearly 25 percent gain, its strongest performance since 2003. Each of the index's 10 broad sectors logged increases with four of them — energy, materials, consumer discretionary and information technology — each up more than 50 percent.
As for 2010, industrial stocks also should be helped as the U.S. government continues spending at record levels on building projects to stimulate the economy, analysts say.
And as consumption overseas picks up, Standard & Poor's equity strategist Alec Young said material companies will benefit from demand for raw goods. A weakening dollar and rising commodities prices, which helped fuel the stock market's 2009 rally, should continue into the new year boosting prices even more, Young said.
However, Young warns that investors should not dive into the sectors betting material or industrial stocks will rise solely because the dollar is weakening. A weak dollar increases demand for exports and makes commodities more attractive to foreign investors, but companies still need to show sales growth.
"Consider currency as icing on the cake," Young said.
Materials stocks, as measured by the S&P 500 index are on track to show a 55 percent gain for 2009, according to Factset, while industrial stocks should end the year up about 25 percent.
International growth is also expected to benefit companies like Colgate-Palmolive Co. and PepsiCo Inc. that make consumer staples companies and sell them in emerging markets, Farr said. Consumer staples shares are on track to rise about 26 percent in 2009.
While strength overseas may boost stocks, the prospects for growth in the U.S. may depend on consumers opening their wallets. A recovery in consumer spending — the primary driver of the economy — will be necessary for the country to rebound from the worst downturn since the Great Depression. With the economy on the upswing, companies that sell discretionary goods and services, like restaurant and entertainment companies, are bound to see improved sales, analysts say.
Consumer spending traditionally picks up as recessions end and helps lead the economy out of a downturn.
"There's pent up demand for spending," said Thomas Villalta, co-portfolio manager of the Jones Villalta Opportunity Fund.
Prices of consumer discretionary stocks are based on such low sales expectations right now that even a modest pickup in 2010 should send shares higher, S&P's Young said. But he cautioned that sales might not be that great, but said he thinks they will improve. Consumer discretionary shares, as measured by the S&P 500 are on track to rise about 61 percent for 2009.
Analysts expect businesses to ramp spending as well, particularly on technology products as companies upgrade infrastructure after skimping on purchases of new computer hardware, software and other gear as the economy swooned. Information technology shares, as measured by the S&P 500 are expected to show a 74 percent gain in 2009, while shares of telecommunication services companies are on track for an 18 percent climb.
Overall, analysts are widely predicting further growth in stocks in 2010. Young predicts the Standard & Poor's 500 index will rise to about 1,215 by the end of the year — about an 8 percent jump from the end of 2009.
Farr is more upbeat on growth for 2010, predicting the S&P 500 will end the year at around 1,250.