Post-Election Risks? What Chip Companies and a Railroad Could Signal Ahead | Investing.com Canada

Post-Election Risks? What Chip Companies and a Railroad Could Signal Ahead | Investing.com Canada


  • AI enthusiasm remains high, but macro uncertainty could be rising in the semiconductor space

  • As earnings season chugs along, we profile NXP Semiconductor, CSX, and ASML Holding

  • Analyst Days on the docket could shed new light on economic risks and some potential tailwinds heading into 2025

We have a treat for you this week: We’re going to skip right past the election.

Looking ahead to the post-November 5th world, three Analyst Days caught our team’s attention. NXP Semiconductor (NASDAQ:), CSX (NASDAQ:), and ASML Holding (NASDAQ:) each hold events that may shed light on key cyclical areas of the global economy.

There’s heightened uncertainty right now, and not just regarding who will be the 47th POTUS. Global demand for semiconductors appears robust – Jensen Huang even used the word “insane” to describe what’s going on at NVIDIA (NASDAQ:) – but that may indeed be due to the secular artificial intelligence story. Other more traditional use areas of chips could be seeing a slowdown. Elsewhere, there are few measures seen more as a macro bellwether than rail freight carload trends.

No matter who resides in the White House three months from now, they might inherit a decent economy by most gauges, though some metrics may be losing steam on the margin, along with soft sentiment among households. growth has been solid throughout the year, and the third quarter could print above 3% on a seasonally adjusted annualized basis.

As with so many indicators, however, there’s nuance here. While the services sector is on the mend, the manufacturing sector has its struggles, at least according to the latest set of PMI numbers published by the Institute for Supply Management and S&P Global (NYSE:).

But we are now more than three weeks into Q4. Investors and portfolio managers must look ahead to what the macro picture will be. Upcoming Analyst Days may offer such clues.

November 7: NXP Semiconductor

Shares of the $59 billion market cap tech stock have trodden water for much of 2024 after an intra-year pop and drop. NXPI hit a high just below $300 after notching a bear-market low below $140 24 months ago. Perhaps the biggest highlight was actually a lowlight this past July.

Despite broad tailwinds in the semiconductor industry, NXP’s second-quarter revenue was down 5% on a year-over-year basis. CEO Kurt Sievers noted that the company navigated a cyclical trough in the industry and that sequential growth is forecast to resume.

November 7: CSX Corp.

We’ll get back to the chips theme in a minute, but let’s jump the tracks to CSX. The Jacksonville-based Industrials-sector stock is likewise off its YTD high, perhaps pressured by about-flat rail traffic compared with this time a year ago. It reported disappointing on October 16, but the release came after an impressive rally off its October lows.

Transports as a group have caught a bid lately; Theory would suggest that the development means good things for the overall stock market. The Index poked to a 52-week high last week on the heels of positive earnings reaction to many airline stocks. The onus remains on transports bulls to lift the index above its all-time high notched in 2021’s fourth quarter.

We will see how that plays out in the final two-plus months of 2024. Following a weak response to its third quarter report, investors will likely keep an eye on CSX’s November 7 Investor Day. It could be the final business update of the year based on our corporate event data deck.

November 14: ASML Holding NV

From the transport of goods via trains to the transport of data through semiconductors, ASML de-railed last week. It released a day earlier than expected due to a “technical error.” Last quarter’s realized net bookings and the bleak 2025 sales outlook rattled the chip industry. ASML, the stock, fell more than 16% last Tuesday in response to the release, and the losses only mounted on Wednesday, though many of its peers snapped back.

Geopolitical tensions and uncertainty about what the new year might bring were said to be the driver of the tepid forecast. Export restrictions on China were specifically cited on the earnings call by Roger Dassen, ASML’s CEO. It was a reminder that bullish AI sentiment may be long-lasting, but other global economic forces can still assert themselves. Chip companies caught a big bid last Thursday, though, after strong (perhaps reassuring) Q3 results and an upbeat outlook from Taiwan Semiconductor (NYSE:).

Investors may get more details on ASML’s outlook at the company’s November 14 Investor Day event. Its management team is then slated to present at five conferences from November 18 through December 3. 

The Bottom Line

It’s a common media refrain that uncertainty runs high ahead of US elections. That seems to be a reality when scanning trends among economically sensitive industries today. Investors should not only parse earnings reports in the next few weeks, but also pay close attention to insights at Analyst Days on tap.





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