Tax-cut plan prompts fund managers to bet on automation
						
		 
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		 [October 06, 2017] 
		 By David Randall 
		 
		NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Trump 
		administration's plan to cut corporate taxes may add more fuel to the 
		already-hot rally in the shares of automation companies. 
		 
		Fund managers from Columbia Management Investment Advisers, Hodges 
		Capital and Hood Capital say that they expect that companies will use 
		part of their tax savings to invest in high-cost machines that will 
		allow them to reduce labor costs over time. 
		 
		That would be a boon for companies such as Cognex Corp <CGNX.O>, which 
		makes so-called machine vision systems that are used to quickly sort and 
		fill orders in e-commerce warehouses, and Faro Technologies Inc <FARO.O>, 
		which makes three-dimensional measuring tools that can help lower labor 
		costs on aerospace assembly lines. 
		 
		"Scarcity of capital is the thing that keeps companies from spending 
		money when it makes sense to do so. Investing in automation would be 
		something that pays for itself quickly," said Matt Litfin, a portfolio 
		manager of the $4.8-billion Columbia Acorn <LACAX.O> fund, who owns 
		shares of Cognex. Shares of the company are up 80 percent year-to-date. 
						
		
		  
						
		Automation companies have rallied overall this year as corporate America 
		look for ways to maintain margins and productivity at a time when wages 
		are rising and unemployment is low. 
		 
		The $1.4 billion Robo Global Robotics and Automation Index ETF <ROBO.O>, 
		which includes a mix of large-cap companies such as Rockwell Automation 
		and Intuitive Surgical, is up over 35 percent for the year to date, 
		nearly triple the 13.5-percent gain in the broad S&P 500 index. 
		 
		Numerous fund holdings are up over 90 percent for the year to date, 
		including drone manufacturer AeroVironment Inc <AVAV.O>, gear 
		manufacturer Harmonic Drive Systems Inc <6324.T>, and laser company IPG 
		Photonics Corp <IPGP.O>. 
		 
		Large-cap automation companies, such as Rockwell Automation Inc <ROK.N> 
		and Emerson Electric Co <EMR.N>, have also posted solid returns so far 
		this year, though smaller-cap companies have seen larger share price 
		gains overall. 
						
		  
						
		
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			Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in 
			New York, U.S., October 3, 2017. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid 
            
			  
The Robo ETF has posted positive inflows every week since President Donald 
Trump's November election, partly due to investor anticipation of a corporate 
tax cut. Investors have sent $461 million into the fund since early August, when 
the Trump administration began publicly discussing its plans to cut the top 
corporate tax rates to 20 percent, from 35 percent. 
 
Prominent Republican senators such as Bob Corker and Rand Paul have criticized 
the Trump administration's plan for its potential to increase the federal 
deficit, leaving its passage far from certain. Yet fund managers say that they 
see the gains in automation companies continuing regardless of whether a tax 
bill passes. 
 
"Even eight years after the financial crisis, companies are still very focused 
on their bottom lines and maintaining efficiency and productivity as much as 
possible," said Eric Marshall, a portfolio manager of the $743-million Hodges 
Small Cap fund. 
Middleby Corp <MIDD.O>, which makes smart ovens and other kitchen equipment used 
in restaurant chains such as Panera Bread, will likely benefit as companies look 
for ways to reduce labor costs as more states raise the minimum wage, he said. 
 
Shares of Middleby are flat for the year, in part due to slow sales of its 
Viking line of high-end ovens after the company had to recall some freestanding 
gas ranges that turned on by themselves with customers unable to turn them off. 
Hodges said that despite the overhang, the company looks poised to continue to 
grow as restaurants expand and high real-estate prices prompt more homeowners to 
upgrade their kitchens. 
  
"This is a company that's got some real secular trends going for it, and a 
corporate tax cut will only accelerate those trends," he said. 
 
(Reporting by David Randall; Editing by Jennifer Ablan, Nick Zieminski and 
Cynthia Osterman) 
				 
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