Overall, 2023 was a great year for stock markets: a strong rebound doubled S&P 500’s value when compared to year-end 2018. Behind the 2023 recovery were corrections in fundamentals (inflation falling to about 3% after peaking at 9% in June 2022, unemployment held steady at 3.5% for more than 18 months, and crude oil prices rebounded to 2019 levels), as well as anomalous trends, such as generative AI surge ($2.2 billion in private equity and venture capital investments in 2023 alone).
Overall, 2023 was a great year for stock markets: a strong rebound doubled S&P 500’s value when compared to year-end 2018. Behind the 2023 recovery were corrections in fundamentals (inflation falling to about 3% after peaking at 9% in June 2022, unemployment held steady at 3.5% for more than 18 months, and crude oil prices rebounded to 2019 levels), as well as anomalous trends, such as generative AI surge ($2.2 billion in private equity and venture capital investments in 2023 alone), along with the two-decade norm of higher returns during an off-year for US elections (8.3% average annual returns for the S&P rise to 16.0% in an average election year; they were 24.2 in 2023).
The market euphoria continues to focus on the big names—the top 10 companies in the S&P 500—now make up 34% of the S&P 500's capitalization, an increase of 15 percentage points over the past decade. Once again, the industrial sector has gone unnoticed in most media coverage. That lack of attention could cause investors to miss out on a sector that is a major force in the economy coupled with its stellar returns and significant tailwinds. As such, the sector seems to be poised for a renaissance—industrial companies can capitalize on it by drawing learnings available from studying the top performers.
Industrials are a behemoth, representing 22% of the total market cap of US public companies by the end of 2023 and accounting for one-fourth of the market cap surge of the past five years (year-end 2018–23). This stock market engine delivered stellar returns in the last five years and has been consistent and resilient through tumultuous times. Total shareholder returns (TSR) rose 20.9% from 2018 to 2023, 360 basis points, more than S&P500. Furthermore, industrials were the only sector that more than doubled its market cap since the pandemic-related slowdown.
In fact, the evidence points to a resurgence of the sector, based on increases observed in manufacturing. Between the first quarter of 2018 and the fourth quarter of 2023, factory output increased 1.2 times to fill orders that reached a 15-year high. And companies’ hiring in 2022 and 2023 more than offset the pandemic-related job cuts of January 2020 to January 2021: 750,000 additions to the workforce, versus job losses of 640,000.
Three trends in the US economy played a large part in this resurgence:
Despite these advantages and the sector’s size, major work still needs to be done. Industrials’ contribution to GDP continues to decline, productivity growth lags other sectors, and the sector’s overall valuations trail the market. Manufacturing contributed 13.3% of GDP in 2003, 11.8% in 2013, and 10.2% in the first half of 2023. Labor productivity in manufacturing increased 1.2 times between 2002 and 2022, compared with a 1.5-times increase for all nonfarm businesses. Compared with other sectors, industrials have relatively low valuations. In 2023, the enterprise value to sales (trailing twelve months) multiple for US industrials was 2.8, compared to 5.5 for Tech, 4.2 for Utilities, 3.6 for Financials, and 3.0 for Communication Services.
The companies in the sector can ride this wave of resurgence by drawing lessons from the leaders. The example of the high-performing companies suggests four measures to take:
The tailwinds are in place for the already-significant US industrial sector to enter a renaissance. Now is the time for companies to demonstrate that they can overcome challenges and seize the moment.
To learn more about the playbook of top performers of industrials sector, read our full report on: Now more than ever, industrials need resilience and performance transformation (https://www.ayna.ai/publication/now-more-than-ever-industrials-need-resilience-and-performance-transformation).
Also, tune into our Titanium Economy podcast, where leaders of industrials sector including, Andy Mattes (Former CEO of Coherent; Board Member at Cohu, Inc. ), Bob Chapman (CEO of Barry-Wehmiller , Mark Behrman (CEO of LSB Industries, Inc. ), Mike Olosky (CEO of Simpson Strong-Tie ), and Stephen Smith (CEO of Amsted Industries share stories of leading transformative growth of their respective companies.