Alcoa Inc. Management Sets the Tone for Earnings Season

ALCOA INC. UPGRADED EXPECTATIONS FOR CHINA'S AUTOMOTIVE PRODUCTION BUT LOWERED THEM FOR NORTH AMERICA. IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

In a year where estimates for U.S. industrial production growth have turned negative and global GDP growth expectations reduced, it's increasingly important to discern which sectors of the industrial economy are outperforming and underperforming. Step forward, Alcoa Inc. (NYSE: AA), a company whose outlook gives great color on which sectors and stocks might be hot in the coming earnings season. Let's look at the key conclusions from management's commentary.

Alcoa Inc. management's outlook

The following table shows how Alcoa's full-year 2016 growth outlook has changed through the course of the year. The figures in bold represent changes in outlook.

DATA SOURCE: ALCOA INC.PRESENTATIONS.

There are three key takeaways from Alcoa's evolving outlook in 2016, and they have a direct resonance for prospects at companies such as General Electric Company (NYSE: GE), Johnson Controls (NYSE: JCI), and United Technologies (NYSE: UTX).

  • Long-term fundamentals in aerospace remain positive, but 2016 is a transitional year and stock selection is important.
  • China's attempts to stimulate its automobile and trucking industry are working.
  • The general thematic trend of the industrial sector in 2016 -- energy, mining, heavy industries bad; everything else stable -- was confirmed.

Aerospace's transitional year

A raft of new aircraft platforms and new engines -- most prominently the geared turbofan from United Technologies' Pratt & Whitney, and the LEAP engine from CFM International, a GE joint venture -- are creating some varied conditions. United Technologies and Honeywell International (NYSE: HON) are both suffering near-term headwinds on commercial OEM sales as they introduce new products on new aircraft platforms.

Moreover, Alcoa CEO Klaus Kleinfeld spoke of the negative impact on airframe components from reductions in build rates on the Airbus A380, Bombardier CSeries, and Boeing 777. On the other hand, the ramp-up in new engine production is creating strong growth because of a "high level of technical sophistication" and "increased product introduction cost for qualification of the component." Meanwhile, "the legacy engines spares and replacements remain strong."

It creates a mixed outlook for United Technologies -- not least because Pratt & Whitney was forced to reduce its 2016 delivery target on the geared turbofan from 200 to 150, citing issues with a fan blade developed with Alcoa. Meanwhile, General Electric looks relatively better placed -- with LEAP production progressing as planned and having a substantive legacy engine base -- as does Honeywell.

China stimulates its auto industry

The big positive surprise in the outlook was the upgrade to expectations in the automotive and heavy truck and trailer markets in China. Kleinfeld cited the positive impact of legislation on the automotive market in China, and it appears that the government's incentives are also working well -- it's good news for Johnson Controls, ahead of its spin-off of Adient later this month. Adient has an industry-leading position in China automotive seating market.

DATA SOURCE: ALCOA INC..PRESENTATIONS.

However, on a less positive note, Alcoa lowered its estimate for North America automotive, citing rising car inventory and falling demand, although truck demand is up 7.3% year to date.

Industrial sector looks stableoutside of energy

The outlook for construction, packaging, and industrial gas turbines has been pretty stable throughout the year. United Technologies, Johnson Controls, and Honeywell International all have significant building and construction exposure -- Johnson Controls through HVAC, Honeywell through controls, and United Technologies with Otis elevators and through HVAC with Carrier.

Meanwhile, Kleinfeld's reference to the industrial gas turbine market's move to "higher value-add products [and] higher-efficient turbines with advanced technology" is almost certainly a reference to General Electric Company's new HA-turbine.

What to expect in earnings season

All told, expect some mixed outlooks from aerospace companies, particularly on the airframe side. Automotive and heavy-duty trucking should see China strengthening, with North America weakening slightly. Meanwhile, the rest of the industrial sector looks to be pretty much on track.

A secret billion-dollar stock opportunity The world's biggest tech company forgot to show you something, but a few Wall Street analysts and the Fool didn't miss a beat: There's a small company that's powering their brand-new gadgets and the coming revolution in technology. And we think its stock price has nearly unlimited room to run for early in-the-know investors! To be one of them, just click here.

Lee Samaha has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of General Electric and Johnson Controls. The Motley Fool is short Johnson Controls. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.