FidelityConnects: Inside the engine room: U.S. industrials and services outlook

Join Payton Liske, Equity Research Analyst, and Nathan Ha, Equity Research Associate, for an in-depth look at two critical sectors driving the U.S. economy: industrials, and business and commercial services. Discover the trends shaping these industries, from infrastructure investment and supply chain dynamics to outsourcing and efficiency solutions. Gain actionable insights to help guide you and your clients in a rapidly evolving market.

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Hello, and welcome to Fidelity Connects.

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I'm Pamela Ritchie. The global economy is shifting, quietly in

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some places, aggressively in others.

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In transportation tightening regulation is shrinking supply and pushing

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pricing higher. In defence geopolitics and policy are

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driving one of the most disruptive spending cycles we have seen in decades,

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if ever. What happens when safety rules, for instance, pull drivers

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off the road just as demand stabilizes, and how might investors

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position for a defence sector being reshaped by innovation and

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potentially historic budget growth.

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Joining us here now to help answer some of these questions and

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more is equity research analyst Payton Liske, and equity research

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associate Nathan Ha, for an in-depth look at two

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critical sectors here driving the U.S.

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economy. So we'll get into industrials and business and

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commercial services all in here today.

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Welcome, Payton. Welcome Nathan, great to see you both.

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Great to see you.

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Thank you very much.

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Delighted to have you here. Let's dig in a little bit on

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...before we get into everything we're ultimately going to come out the other

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end with how you invest this. That is sort of important to lay the foundation

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a bit. Payton, you take a look at companies that are, pardon the

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pun, defensive in nature, they are cyclical in nature.

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Some will say the cycle is broken right now and the way you invest can't

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just be cyclically focused.

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Tell us a bit about your style, how you approach things.

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I don't think it's a whole lot different than how we focus at

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Fidelity. It's focused on quality, it's focus on

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really strong management teams that are incentivized and aligned

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with shareholders to grow shareholder value over time.

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Getting more specifically into the cyclical areas, I mean, a lot of focus on

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balance sheet, that's extremely important to be able to capitalize on

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these down cycles.

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A lot of focus on ability to grow market share, which can be a differentiating

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factor on growth through a cycle, and a lot of focus on ability to

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drive incremental margins above their peers, so you have

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a differentiated kind of margin story that can drive differentiated

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earnings growth and ultimately superior returns through a cycle.

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Those are some of the key factors that we kind of focus on.

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It really is sort of a bottoms-up approach.

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The cycles be what they may and at the moment they are sort of being what they

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may so that's how you approach it.

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Nathan, tell us your coverage list.

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It's actually fascinating some of the areas that you go into and areas that

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produce products in some cases that we probably use every day we don't know

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anything about.

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Definitely. It's an eclectic mix.

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I cover information services, a wide mix of

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industrial and business services, government services, and IT services.

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Fantastic. At the moment there's lots of different areas within,

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there's consultants, there's other things, you're picking through for winners

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and losers, which you would always be doing.

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I might just ask you why this is a different moment for going hunting for

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winners and losers within all of those industries.

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We're at an interesting time where AI, it's

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unheard of on what it can do.

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We've seen AI losers in a case where c-count based

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businesses that need advice, they can replace that with ChatGPT

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or AI.

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So not a consultant, like a traditional consulting ...

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you'd hire that on, have them sit in your offices for six months and then

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recommend and implement. That's not happening.

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It's happening less.

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Where we really want to find good stocks and good businesses is ones that have

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a data moat and some type of intellectual property that can't be replaced.

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Are both of you looking at very, very large companies and also

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some smaller companies? Payton, why don't you begin a little bit with the

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universe that you take a look at.

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It's across cap structures.

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We've got some of the largest defence companies, some of largest aerospace

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and defence companies in the world, some of the largest transportation

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companies in the world right down to sub-billion market cap companies.

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It ranges the entire spectrum.

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And also, Nathan, would you say the same thing, some of the largest, some of

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the smallest? You have to kind of know what some of the smaller companies are

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doing because they're on a bit of a cutting edge there.

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Yeah, we try to triangulate it. We talk to customers but we also talk to a lot

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of the new entrants. There's a lot a new AI companies so we try to

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figure out what they have and what they can do as well.

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Should we begin with transportation with you to kind of go through this?

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Transportation involves all modes of it but there has

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been a fascinating, very long reopening from COVID

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and all kinds of messes within there.

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Why don't you take us through, I guess, a post-COVID cycle, if that's what you

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want to call it, and what it's done to the transport.

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We're exiting the third year of a down cycle which is very unusual for

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transportation.

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Typically a down-cycle lasts anywhere between kind of 9 to 18 months.

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This is coming off of an unprecedented up-cycle so there was

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the largest increase in driver supply that we've ever seen in the US

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so it stands to reason that it would take some time for that

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to kind of cleanse. I think there's a couple of really interesting

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factors as we head into' 26.

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The first is some changing around the regulatory environment, which you had

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alluded to earlier, we're starting to see a crackdown

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on the issuance of non-domiciled CDLs which...

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And this is all US.

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This is all specifically to US trucking which

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tends to drive the pricing for a lot of other modes of transportation.

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This is where we kind of focus.

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What we've seen is anywhere up to 20% of the total driver supply

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is under review.

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There's been a large amount of these licences that have been deemed to be

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issued improperly so they're having to go through a requalification process.

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It's unclear exactly to what extent the level of disruption will be

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but I'm watching spot trucking rates as kind of the

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real time indicator of the impact on the market that this policy will have.

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We've seen the largest increase post-US Thanksgiving in

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the last 10 years in truckload spot rates.

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It's clearly having an impact, and that's during a time where demand hasn't

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been overly strong either.

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We're seeing some real supply disruption.

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I think there's several positive catalysts

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on the demand side. It's always hard to predict but we're coming off of

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three years of a downturn.

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So we've got the it couldn't be worse piece.

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That's a good starting point.

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I think it's the 35th consecutive month that the Cash Freight shipment Index

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has been negative, which is the longest...

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What index?

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The Cash Freight shipment index, it's just a broad proxy of broader shipping

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volumes, 35th straight month, it's the longest coinciding

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downturn since the inception of the data series in 1990.

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It tells you pretty low starting point.

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We have aggressive easing and monetary policy as well

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as fiscal policy coming from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

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I think we're moving through kind of peak tariff uncertainty

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which will be really helpful in thawing some of that capital investment cycle

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which tends to trigger industrial production related activity.

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I think there's several different potential positive demand catalysts at the

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same time that you have capacity being kind of forced out of the market which

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could create the conditions for a really strong upcycle.

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Okay, and as you say, that pricing, that spot pricing is a really interesting

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indicator. Nathan, tell us a little bit about ...

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you spend a lot of time, it sounds like, at various conferences

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getting a sense of massive amounts of innovation in some of the

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areas that you follow. Do you want to just tell us some of highlights or some

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of the trends that are being discussed and maybe something that surprised you.

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What are you doing at these conferences? What are you hearing?

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One of the biggest things is the industry conferences are super helpful.

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We get to talk to customers as well and getting a good customer view on what

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matters and what is needed and what is mission critical is really where we find

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AI winners and losers. If there's a nice to have it's sometimes often

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replaced with AI. We want to avoid being in those areas and want to

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be in areas where it's a mission critical base.

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Can you give us an example? That sounds like it would apply to every sector

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almost.

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There's an insurance data provider company and what they do is they

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provide the insurance data for all the insurance industry.

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The key variable for this is the moat that they have with the proprietary

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data. We try to focus on companies like that where you can't replace it.

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What you would need is to get all 2,000 insurance companies

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to get on board and give them the data which is something that a new entrant

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AI would find very difficult to do.

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They can't go and scrape it from somewhere else.

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The insurance companies would have to release it and they don't.

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It's proprietary data.

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Really interesting.

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What about a nice to have?

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What's a nice to have?

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There's some consulting companies, some that sell it in terms

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of a seat-based approach and what

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they do is they give advice and something that companies and customers have

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found is you can get really good advice with AI.

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When you see and you look out a few years there's a real risk that they start

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replacing those seat-based contracts with AI.

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A seat-based contract is just bums in seats, so you have this many people we

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need to provide this many programs for those many computers, essentially.

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That is on the decline.

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Exactly.

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We've seen slow but we haven't seen it real bad yet.

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That's what we're trying to avoid.

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Okay, that's what you're trying to avoid because you see that kind of coming in

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a little bit. Let's go to the defence sector because actually there's quite a

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lot that you both take a look at that comes together there.

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The huge defence companies were told in the last

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several days that the Trump administration would like them as public

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companies to not give out dividends and no more share buybacks.

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You've got to do it for the nation type feel.

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We saw share prices plunge on this.

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Put this into context for us. I mean, it sounds bad for investors.

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Is there something else we should know here?

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I think there's quite a bit of nuance to it and it's pretty open-ended.

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I don't think it was necessarily that they can't pay dividends and buybacks,

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it's more performance-based.

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If you're not living up to your contractual standards, you're delivering

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on time, on budget, then there's going to be some consequences to

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that until you can get back on time and on budget.

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I think the other component to that was if you are deemed to be

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a bottleneck in the Department of War's ability to move towards their national

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security objectives over time, meaning mainly ability

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to ramp production, and if you're not investing enough to be able to get to

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where we need to be over the medium to long term, and we deem that to be

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a risk, then we're going to limit your ability to repay

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shareholders with buybacks and dividends until you have invested in the

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capacity.

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It's tied to an outcome.

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It's tied to an outcome and I think it doesn't really change how we invest

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or think about the stocks because we've always been focused on the companies

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that have been best of breed. I think, if anything, it's just going to drive

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that wedge of performance because the

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TSR has been driven in large part by the return of capital,

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the total shareholder return of these stocks over time.

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Anywhere upwards of almost a third has been driven by the return of capital to

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shareholders in various forms. I think it could have a meaningful divide

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in performance between the best in class and those that are underperforming.

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Hello, investors. We'll be back to the show in just a moment.

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DialoguesFidelity podcasts available on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever

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else you get your podcasts. Now back to today's show.

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Are the biggest companies that we know, again, they tend to be household names,

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you know them at this point. They've been around for a long, long time

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producing conventional weapons along with other defence

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items.

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I don't know, I'm out of my depth, I don't know what you call them exactly.

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Are they the ones taking us into the future?

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Are they doing tuck-in acquisitions to make sure that they have the right

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innovations? Are they being disrupted?

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I think they're at risk of being disrupted.

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If you look at the objectives of this administration

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and kind of what they're pushing towards it's creating

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more innovation, faster innovation cycles, doing things cheaper.

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A lot of that is breaking down barriers to entry so we can increase competition

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because we've had this kind of consolidation of the industrial base among

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the four or five large defence primes which has stifled

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innovation. I think a review of the procurement practices have

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kind of shown that there's some perverse incentives in the system that need to

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be changed in order to incentivize new entrants as well as to incentivize

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better behaviour.

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Are they there to keep competitors out?

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Is that the idea?

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The process is very opaque, there's a lot of red tape, it's

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very difficult to manage, it's very lengthy so it

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tends to be a deterrent to private capital because you have large upfront

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investments and this kind of unknown long time horizon to recouping that

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capital.

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Got it.

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Enter Nathan because there's a lot of making way, it

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sounds like, with some of the companies that you're looking at and the

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industries themselves to make way to find ways

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to get these innovations through, either to the bigger defence companies

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or not. Take us through that.

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These are smaller players that may move faster.

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I cover a lot of the smaller ones.

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They're more on the add-on services.

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They don't build the big missiles that Payton's coverage does

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but what we have found is that historical ways of the cost plus contracting

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where you give them money and offer a margin on top of it,

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it seems like that is less inclined with this new administration.

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We're seeing a bigger shift to fixed price and outcome-based contracting.

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That actually does drive higher margins if you do have the right product.

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We're trying to focus on who has the right products.

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What is an example of an add-on?

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Not perhaps using an example of a missile itself but what would be an

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add on?

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These are backpacks that are put on troops to prevent people from being able to

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track where the troops are.

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These are software that tracks where the enemies are or where your current

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troops are or communication devices that don't need internet service.

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Not the big missiles  but things that you do need on the battlefield still.

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Do we need more of those or is that part of the discussion that you need more

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of that and less of something else? I mean, I guess things have to work in

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conjunction but it sounds like the battlefield is changing and

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what you need, therefore, is changing.

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I think they're needed together.

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It's a picks and shovels play, potentially underappreciated.

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Just say more about that. Why is it underappreciated?

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When we think about the defence budget growing we typically think about needing

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more missiles and more rockets and more tanks but we

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don't necessarily think about what the war fighter needs.

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If you can find a company that is geared to the war fighter that actually

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does have real benefits from the defence project growth.

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And less, I'm assuming, Payton, of things that slow things down.

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Is that part of the argument as well?

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It's just easier to get something that's smaller, perhaps, through and

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approved? Is that fair?

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That's fair. I think it's really difficult for the primes that have this legacy

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cash flow base and contract base that they need

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to gradually shift off of and move from.

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There's this push and pull, how quickly do we do this, how much do we disrupt

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ourselves and how fast do we move?

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I think that's part of the challenge.

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We're looking for the management teams that are willing to

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make those tough decisions, invest for the long term, make the right moves

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that we think are going to be strategically important to make sure they're

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relevant in the future and winning.

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That's what we're focused on.

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There's money hanging there, low-hanging fruit money.

16:42.267 --> 16:45.904
Talk to us, both of you, a little bit about the growth of the defence budget in

16:45.904 --> 16:48.540
the US. Put it in context for us.

16:48.540 --> 16:52.344
Start with you, I think there's something to add for everyone here but Nathan...

16:52.344 --> 16:55.848
Just over a year ago we had DOGE happen.

16:55.848 --> 16:57.116
Was that a year ago? It's been a long year.

16:57.116 --> 17:00.853
It was November of 2024.

17:00.853 --> 17:04.757
It does feel like a long time ago.

17:04.757 --> 17:07.159
The whole mission was to reduce spending.

17:07.159 --> 17:11.130
We've actually had a year of pent-up demand that has not

17:11.130 --> 17:14.900
been spent and now we've got an additional budget layer.

17:14.900 --> 17:18.670
I think the setup for this year is attractive.

17:18.670 --> 17:22.941
We've got a lot of budget that needs to be spent that will be spent likely

17:22.941 --> 17:24.977
in the next 12 months.

17:24.977 --> 17:29.014
It's a budget, I mean, it's certainly not peace time for the entire world

17:29.014 --> 17:31.450
but it's so-called a peace time budget, is that fair?

17:31.450 --> 17:34.153
It's big.

17:34.153 --> 17:39.124
To put it into context, the US is spending just a little over 3%

17:39.124 --> 17:42.494
on defence as a percentage of GDP.

17:42.494 --> 17:44.363
We're asking NATO to start to push towards 5.

17:44.363 --> 17:48.634
If you look at the proposal that Trump's put out of

17:48.634 --> 17:52.638
$1.5 trillion that would get us just under 5%, which I

17:52.638 --> 17:55.974
think would be a very challenging thing to do based on just the fiscal

17:55.974 --> 17:58.444
circumstances of the US at the moment.

17:58.444 --> 18:02.781
I think it's clear the direction of travel is that Trump's

18:02.781 --> 18:06.885
view of this peace through strength, we need to invest

18:06.885 --> 18:10.656
to be able to show force of strength.

18:10.656 --> 18:14.593
Part of that's going to be increasing the investment in the defence

18:14.593 --> 18:18.664
industrial base. I think it's more likely now that

18:18.664 --> 18:22.601
we see a higher level of growth into '27 than what people

18:22.601 --> 18:26.238
were expecting which presents some upside to earnings estimates in some of

18:26.238 --> 18:27.906
these companies.

18:27.906 --> 18:31.844
Certain things will come to fruition maybe in 2027,

18:31.844 --> 18:36.215
that's what you're aiming towards. A comment, I think it was during

18:36.215 --> 18:40.185
salary negotiations for Elon Musk, but it was just one of those comments

18:40.185 --> 18:43.021
that got made, sort of hung out there in the markets.

18:43.021 --> 18:47.025
He said something along the lines of if I'm building a robot

18:47.025 --> 18:49.428
army I'm going to have to get paid enough.

18:49.428 --> 18:53.465
It was along with many other reasons why his increase in

18:53.465 --> 18:57.669
salary happened. It just sort of gave you that visual of what is

18:57.669 --> 19:02.107
being worked upon by various companies and Starlink's capabilities

19:02.107 --> 19:03.942
in Ukraine and so on.

19:03.942 --> 19:07.412
There's lots of different places there that you can look towards that.

19:07.412 --> 19:10.282
Are those types, I mean, the robotic army, is that being discussed by some of

19:10.282 --> 19:11.517
the companies you're following?

19:11.517 --> 19:15.621
Definitely discussed. I was at a conference in Washington earlier

19:15.621 --> 19:19.925
this year and it seemed like all these new entrant startups

19:19.925 --> 19:24.062
wanted to turn their soldiers into variants of Iron

19:24.062 --> 19:27.065
Man. We'll see how that pans out.

19:27.065 --> 19:30.068
What's that look like? What are the add-ons to that?

19:30.068 --> 19:34.239
They've got AI goggles that can see through walls and predict where people are

19:34.239 --> 19:35.974
going.

19:35.974 --> 19:39.945
They've got rocket launchers that use AI to track where you

19:39.945 --> 19:41.013
should shoot.

19:41.013 --> 19:43.982
So it's a person with a rocket on their back but they're...

19:43.982 --> 19:47.753
It's got an AI screen on it that shows you where you should be shooting to hit

19:47.753 --> 19:52.391
the moving target. Those are a few examples.

19:52.391 --> 19:54.293
Do you like your job? Is it fun?

19:54.293 --> 19:58.564
It's a lot of fun but every time I go to Washington I come back realizing

19:58.564 --> 20:01.600
that the world's not getting any safer.

20:01.600 --> 20:05.103
That is really interesting. Maybe just to put it sort of back into the context

20:05.103 --> 20:09.741
of building for strength as a deterrent, ultimately.

20:09.741 --> 20:12.945
Is there anything you can comment on it just in terms of competitors across the

20:12.945 --> 20:16.014
world and what else is being done? What are we building towards to make sure

20:16.014 --> 20:19.384
that safety occurs?

20:19.384 --> 20:23.422
I think the big push is more the restructuring of how we do things

20:23.422 --> 20:27.226
to make sure that we're getting more productivity out of every dollar spent.

20:27.226 --> 20:30.929
I think if you were just to look at China, for example, the Department of

20:30.929 --> 20:32.397
Defence does a study every year.

20:32.397 --> 20:35.767
I'm sure they don't release exactly what they're planning to do but you just

20:35.767 --> 20:36.068
get a sense of...

20:36.068 --> 20:39.805
No, but they just look at the trends in their industrial base, their defence

20:39.805 --> 20:44.443
industrial base. The last one was, I think it's been picked up by the media and

20:44.443 --> 20:48.513
it was a pretty stark increase that we've seen in a

20:48.513 --> 20:53.452
lot of their industrial capacity that I think has kickstarted a fire under

20:53.452 --> 20:57.656
at least this administration to really start to move in the right direction.

20:57.656 --> 21:00.892
One of the things that likes to get quoted is that China has something like 230

21:00.892 --> 21:04.896
times the capacity to produce naval ships that the

21:04.896 --> 21:09.334
US has. I think they have one shipyard that's the entire capacity of

21:09.334 --> 21:13.405
all of the US naval shipbuilding capacity.

21:13.405 --> 21:15.674
We're clearly falling behind.

21:15.674 --> 21:19.611
China is spending, based on the regulatory

21:19.611 --> 21:24.082
stats, half of what the US spends, a little under half, but

21:24.082 --> 21:27.686
they're getting far more productivity out of every dollar spent.

21:27.686 --> 21:31.690
I think that's a big push. How we do that is, kind of going back, breaking down

21:31.690 --> 21:36.395
those barriers, making sure that we are increasing competition,

21:36.395 --> 21:39.131
bringing in private capital, attracting private capital.

21:39.164 --> 21:40.932
These are all really important things.

21:40.932 --> 21:44.102
Talk a little bit more about that breaking down entrance.

21:44.102 --> 21:48.473
We spoke a little bit, I think yesterday, just about

21:48.473 --> 21:52.844
comparing it almost to like an open platform in finance versus

21:52.844 --> 21:56.782
a closed. Just tell us a bit more about how that may create

21:56.782 --> 22:01.219
less friction ultimately for investing, for creating.

22:01.219 --> 22:05.223
When you think about historical way of contracts it was a sum of

22:05.223 --> 22:09.161
money that was given out and you can basically build what you need or

22:09.161 --> 22:11.396
what the government needs.

22:11.396 --> 22:15.600
The new model has been new entrants like a private company, Anderol,

22:15.600 --> 22:19.237
where they build a product and they front-run the cost and then they sell it to

22:19.237 --> 22:21.273
the government on a per cost basis.

22:21.273 --> 22:25.277
So more on a productized commercial way and the government's starting to

22:25.277 --> 22:29.014
appreciate that because there's more incentive to innovate faster and build

22:29.014 --> 22:30.248
faster.

22:30.248 --> 22:32.084
How do you notice that as well?

22:32.084 --> 22:36.121
Do the larger, well-known companies, are they trying to shift from

22:36.154 --> 22:38.490
that, because they've obviously have been built on the contract side of things.

22:38.490 --> 22:43.228
That's the big shift, kind of what Nathan was just discussing,

22:43.228 --> 22:47.532
we've got private companies now that are essentially

22:47.532 --> 22:51.503
going out and building products that they believe the government or the

22:51.503 --> 22:55.540
Defence Department needs, not the Defence Department coming to a contractor and

22:55.540 --> 22:57.576
saying this is what we think we need.

22:57.576 --> 22:59.578
That's a big difference.

22:59.578 --> 23:03.615
It's something that is a huge fundamental shift in your culture, in your

23:03.615 --> 23:08.653
company and how you run your business from an R&D perspective, from everything.

23:08.653 --> 23:12.824
That's really what we're focused on, finding the companies that are making that

23:12.824 --> 23:15.694
switch, showing evidence of it and that we think can be long term winners in

23:15.694 --> 23:16.661
this space.

23:16.661 --> 23:21.066
Do you think transportation being an example but you could probably extend

23:21.066 --> 23:24.903
it to other industries as well, that some of the changes that are being made

23:24.903 --> 23:29.307
here for defence purposes and to get things moving faster

23:29.307 --> 23:32.310
will trickle down and be used in other industries?

23:32.310 --> 23:36.448
There's also discussion of the other 493 stocks and companies

23:36.448 --> 23:40.252
implementing AI but this is actually a fundamental shift in the way you do

23:40.252 --> 23:43.889
business. Do you see that happening for transportation when they do their next

23:43.889 --> 23:46.591
investment cycle?

23:46.591 --> 23:50.929
There's potential benefits from AI, for sure, from a productivity perspective.

23:50.929 --> 23:53.832
It's less obvious, I think, at the moment.

23:53.832 --> 23:57.302
We've talked about autonomous driving technology which we'll see...

23:57.335 --> 24:01.072
Where is that? That was five years ago, we should be doing it now kinda thing.

24:01.072 --> 24:05.043
It's something that I track pretty closely because it has the potential

24:05.043 --> 24:07.279
to be hugely disruptive.

24:07.279 --> 24:10.949
From what I've seen it's still quite a ways away on the long haul trucking

24:10.949 --> 24:15.253
side. That's kind of where I think we'll see it first.

24:15.253 --> 24:19.591
I think it's still outside of our time horizon yet but

24:19.591 --> 24:23.628
monitoring closely. That could be extremely impactful on

24:23.628 --> 24:28.166
the broader industry. Outside of that I think we're seeing implementation

24:28.166 --> 24:32.871
of AI and brokerage. One of the largest brokerages

24:32.871 --> 24:34.706
in the US, C.H.

24:34.706 --> 24:38.844
Robinson, has recently shown that through this pass-down cycle they can

24:38.844 --> 24:42.914
actually have some of the best margins that they've ever put up through

24:42.914 --> 24:47.018
increased productivity. Part of that they attribute to implementations

24:47.018 --> 24:48.620
of AI.

24:48.620 --> 24:52.524
That's fascinating. Let me ask both of you this question.

24:52.524 --> 24:57.362
The opportunity for investment if actual

24:57.362 --> 25:01.433
deliverables may look more like 2027 and beyond,

25:01.433 --> 25:04.002
how long is this investment cycle, do you think?

25:04.002 --> 25:06.438
Are we right at the beginning? Where are we?

25:06.438 --> 25:08.139
We've certainly seen defence stocks have done very well over the course of the
last

25:08.139 --> 25:11.877
year or so but what inning are we in?

25:11.877 --> 25:14.479
I'll ask that to you both.

25:14.479 --> 25:15.814
Who wants to go first?

25:15.814 --> 25:18.917
I think on the defence side we're very early still.

25:18.917 --> 25:22.420
It's a long cycle business.

25:22.420 --> 25:26.691
Even though our goal is to shorten the

25:26.691 --> 25:30.595
innovation cycle it's going to take a long time to do that.

25:30.595 --> 25:34.833
The procurement process is still measured in years.

25:34.833 --> 25:37.068
I think defence, we are still very early in that transition.

25:37.068 --> 25:43.708
I think in other areas, transportation is a much shorter cycle industry and

25:43.708 --> 25:47.078
it's also being commercial, adapts very quickly.

25:47.078 --> 25:51.349
The companies that I cover are such a small wallet share of the budget that

25:51.349 --> 25:54.619
the budget is a tailwind for them. I'm trying to pick and choose winners that

25:54.619 --> 25:58.723
are the long term can continue to gain share despite what the budget does.

25:58.723 --> 26:04.029
Drones have been around forever, this isn't something new, and they're cheap.

26:04.029 --> 26:06.565
Is there an investment cycle in sort of that type of technology?

26:06.565 --> 26:09.734
Give us a sense of the types of technology where something's gonna be a bit

26:09.734 --> 26:12.737
more drawn out, or maybe there isn't.

26:12.737 --> 26:16.741
There's definitely a secular change there to how wars are

26:16.741 --> 26:21.446
fought following the Russia-Ukraine war.

26:21.446 --> 26:25.250
There are real threats that companies have talked about, the government has

26:25.250 --> 26:28.053
talked about that they're trying to get ahead of.

26:28.053 --> 26:31.923
There is a secular tailwind on that end.

26:31.923 --> 26:35.393
We are trying to focus on who can be a winner and loser there because it's

26:35.393 --> 26:38.330
tough to figure out what the differentiating factor is for each one.

26:38.330 --> 26:41.032
We're still early innings, that's why it's hard to figure it out.

26:41.032 --> 26:43.134
Very early, yeah.

26:43.134 --> 26:45.737
What would be a final thought from each of you on the industries that you

26:45.737 --> 26:49.741
follow? It can be one particular piece of what you're

26:49.741 --> 26:52.911
looking at but just sort of a forward-looking statement.

26:52.944 --> 26:55.981
Payton, I might ask you to start with that to finish this out.

26:55.981 --> 26:59.985
I'm just pretty optimistic on the outlook for the transportation space

26:59.985 --> 27:02.153
into '26. It's been a very long down cycle.

27:02.153 --> 27:06.057
I think that there's some really interesting catalysts shaping up here that

27:06.057 --> 27:09.828
could be a nice fundamental inflection for the industry and the stocks have

27:09.828 --> 27:12.797
started to react favourably. I think some of them had a good run but we still

27:12.797 --> 27:17.102
see quite a bit of value looking out on a mid-cycle range power basis for

27:17.102 --> 27:19.571
some areas within the space.

27:19.571 --> 27:22.040
Fascinating to speak to you about some of these things.

27:22.040 --> 27:26.044
Nathan, what do you think as sort of a final forward looking?

27:26.044 --> 27:29.114
Forward looking, I think there's a lot of opportunities for potential mispriced

27:29.114 --> 27:33.084
equities that have been picked as AI losers that we can find

27:33.084 --> 27:34.919
as AI winners.

27:34.919 --> 27:37.555
On the defence side of things, like Payton said, I think we're still in the

27:37.555 --> 27:42.060
early innings and I think that we've been able to find some gems that

27:42.060 --> 27:46.197
are real share gainers in the budget and have figured

27:46.197 --> 27:48.266
out the innovation aspect of it.

27:48.266 --> 27:52.203
The companies that have data locked up are looking more like

27:52.203 --> 27:53.071
winners.

27:53.071 --> 27:54.606
Exactly.

27:54.606 --> 27:56.975
Fascinating to get your thoughts on both of these.

27:56.975 --> 27:58.977
Nathan and Payton, thank you for joining us here today.

27:58.977 --> 27:59.577
We'll see you soon.

27:59.577 --> 28:00.578
Thank you.

28:00.779 --> 28:04.716
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