Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Morgan Stanley picks ‘regional champions’

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MORGAN Stanley said most acute supply chain disruption­s are already easing and will be more fully resolved within the first half of 2022. That’s the base case the investment bank laid out in a recent report assessing the global supply chain, its risks and chokepoint­s.

This year’s supply chain crisis has hit companies hard as bottleneck­s built up and industrial production failed to meet a post-pandemic spike in demand. Energy shortages in China and Europe, as well as Covid-related lockdowns, have contribute­d to the huge squeeze in supply chains.

Supply chains remain vulnerable, especially as the world is still assessing the risk of new omicron strains, Morgan Stanley said.

“However, orders have surged amid anxiety about sourcing product, thus inflating backlogs and setting the scene for a sharper than-expected short-term unwind, particular­ly for consumer electronic­s and segments facing demand destructio­n risk,” the bank’s analysts wrote in the December 14 report.

Logistics costs will remain “significan­tly higher” and will be “persistent through 2022,” Morgan Stanley predicted. “Quarantine and travel restrictio­ns are unlikely to be eased for key transconti­nental routes in a coordinate­d fashion through 2022, with little new capacity until late 2023.”

For companies producing tech hardware, Morgan Stanley is cautious on those with elevated levels of backlog as well as limited visibility into when demand will return to normal. It says it prefers semiconduc­tor firms exposed to cars and industrial­s.

Stocks most crucial to supply chains

The investment firm identified companies it says are “regional champions,” “recognizin­g their importance to supply chains and the role that policymake­rs may play . . . to support their position against competitiv­e pressures from other spheres of influence.”

“These companies have indeed featured prominentl­y through the global supply chain challenges of 2020/21, but in broad terms we have also seen them show stronger profitabil­ity trends and significan­tly outperform the MSCI ACWI global equity benchmark,” the report said.

The MSCI ACWI index is comprised of stocks under the MSCI world as well as emerging markets indices.

These are the top stocks that Morgan Stanley says are most “central” to supply chains.

Morgan Stanley also listed the companies it said were most pressured by supply chain bottleneck­s.

“Industries that fall into this category are ones that most acutely transmit the squeeze of supply chain pressures, partially because the companies within this cohort face persistent reliance on labour inputs in spite of increased automation or capital investment,” the firm said.

Coupled with other factors such as a reliance on markets subject to trade or other policy frictions, this “leaves such companies vulnerable to geopolitic­al and labour dynamics, but also crucial to global supply chains,” it said. Some examples include container shipping and semiconduc­tor firms.

Such firms may be facing cost pressure, but they still hold pricing power by virtue of their industry position, according to Morgan Stanley. These are the stocks that fall under the “bottleneck” category.

“In the face of disruption­s and capacity constraint­s, there are limited options except to raise prices to compensate for higher input costs or to ration capacity through backlogs,” Morgan Stanley said, of such firms facing bottleneck­s.

 ?? Getty Images ?? Cargo containers sit stacked on a ship on November 22, 2021 in Bayonne, New Jersey.
Firms squeezed by bottleneck­s
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Getty Images Cargo containers sit stacked on a ship on November 22, 2021 in Bayonne, New Jersey. Firms squeezed by bottleneck­s —

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