The next industrial revolution is happening now, on the other side of the world. Benefit by investing in Chinese industrial and technology companies.
The notion of human workers being displaced by cheaper, more skilled robots has been circulating for years now. Mostly to no avail. Great strides have been made in the fields of robotics and automation, but to date, we haven’t actually seen this great shift in the workplace.
A human brain still must oversee automated work, and make quality and safety decisions that machines simply can’t make.
The advent of artificial intelligence, however, has only recently brought a new dimension to work that’s still largely being done by human hand – and human brains – finally setting the stage for such a change. As Bill Studebaker, President and Chief Investment Officer of index and research company Robo Global, recently explained, “When you’re looking out at where the world’s going in the next three to five years, I think people are going to be blown away by the types of innovations that are occurring.”
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The seeds of the next industrial revolution aren’t being planted in the United States, however. For better or worse, the United States’ slow migration away from manufacturing business and toward service-oriented ones means they won’t be easily replaced. Rather, China would be the big beneficiary of the melding of automation and artificial intelligence.
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Investors would be wise to look eastward at several Chinese tech and industrial stocks for automation opportunities.
First Comes the Artificial Intelligence
In the middle of 2015, China’s Premier Li Keqiang officially unveiled the country’s “Made in China 2025” initiative. It was a statement in and of itself, even if it was unclear exactly what it meant. But greater clarity is rightfully turning more heads – a huge piece of this push is meant to transform China’s manufacturing arm into one that’s bigger and better than any other.
That outlook dovetails with another initiative that’s taken shape in the meantime: China wants to be the world’s artificial intelligence leader by 2030, making AI a nearly $150 billion industry for the country.
China is putting its money where its mouth is, too. The state has committed more than $2 billion worth of funding to build an artificial intelligence research and development presence in Beijing.
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Private-sector players are coming to the table as well. E-commerce giant Alibaba (BABA, $190.50) has pledged to spend $15 billion before the end of 2020 to support what it’s calling the DAMO Academy (“discovery, adventure, momentum, and outlook”). The organization is aimed at the creation of technologies that will make China an industrial powerhouse, not just by virtue of doing more, but also by virtue of doing better. DAMO will work on blockchain, computer security and other new technologies, but artificial intelligence will be the focal point, without even knowing exactly how that work may be applied in the future.
Baidu (BIDU, $235.94) and Tencent Holdings (TCEHY, $55.26) are getting in on the act as well, moving in the same direction as China’s government initiatives. Baidu’s open autonomous driving platform, called Project Apollo, claims carmakers like Ford (F) as participating members. Tencent, meanwhile, has already begun offering practical, marketable applications of its AI technologies. Imaging technologies that can identify cancer and a powerful artificial intelligent assistant are just a couple of the tools it has developed.
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The step between where the country’s AI machine is now and the point where it can be used to reinvent China’s manufacturing engine is a relatively small one.
That step is already being taken.
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Then Comes the Automation
While the best is yet to come in terms of using smarter robots to automate factory work, the tide has already turned, in China more so than anywhere else. The number of industrial robots put to work there reached record levels in 2016, and installations are projected to swell at an annualized pace of between 15% and 20% in China through 2020.
Whether that’s a good thing or a bad thing depends on who you ask.
Gerald Wong, CEO of Shanghai-based telecom electronics manufacturer Cambridge Industries Group, lamented late last year, “China’s labor costs are increasing, or doubling, every few years. We are actually overcoming the difficulty by increasing our efficiency, through automation.”
He’s right. In 2008, the average Chinese worker earned about 29,000 yuan, or roughly $4,500 (U.S.) In 2016, that figure was closer to 67,000 yuan, or $10,600.
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The rise in earnings is in near-perfect synchronization with the rise in the country’s use of manufacturing robots, implying – as feared – that cheaper and more productive robots are displacing real people from jobs. But a closer inspection of the data reveals that China is facing a labor shortage. The shortage is particularly pronounced in coastal manufacturing regions, where the nation’s factories say they only have access to about half the number of industrial employees they need.
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More important, fears of steep unemployment and growing poverty in China have proven completely unmerited, with the nation’s standard of living improving in conjunction with the greater prosperity that comes from greater (and better) production capacity. Humans aren’t displaced for very long. They’re retrained, even if informally, to oversee more and more output, with much of that output growth the result of automation.
Yet, the industrial benefits of practical AI have only just begun to be realized.
Opportunities
As for how the still-budding trend is a viable opportunity for investors, there are more options than one might realize.
One of them is Tencent, not because it’s building industrial robots (it isn’t), but because it’s developing artificial intelligence tools that “do” something here and now that could set the stage for a surge in AI-driven productivity. Alibaba and Baidu are options as well, even if slightly less focused on third-party industrial uses of artificial intelligence and automation.
A more direct play on the rise of robots in China is Japan’s Fanuc Corporation (FANUY, $25.00). It’s listed over-the-counter, but don’t let the lack of a major exchange listing fool you. It’s a $46 billion behemoth, and claims 65% of the industrial CNC market as its own. It’s also a big supplier to Chinese factories looking to implement automated technologies, which can help drive gross margins to sometimes in excess of 40%. Even in an “off” quarter, though, gross margins rarely slip below 20%. It’s amazing Fanuc has remained one of the market’s better-kept secrets.
A simpler and more elegant solution is outsourcing the robotics stock-picking work to the experts, and tapping into the Robo Global Robotics & Automation ETF (ROBO, $25.00).
The exchange-traded fund holds stocks key to the industry, mirroring the holdings that make up the Robo Global Robotics & Automation Index. The ETF’s top holding is iRobot (IRBT), which has developed a suite of smart, automated vacuum cleaners for consumers and is tiptoeing into the commercial-service space. Also in ROBO’s top 10 holdings are Rockwell Automation (ROK), Omron (OMRNY), the aforementioned Fanuc and a whole slew of other stocks that might be tough for North American investors to invest in.
“Forty percent of our index is in the U.S., and 60% is international,” says Robo Global’s Studebaker, adding that “if investors want to participate in the market and really capture the trend, they need to be very global.”
However an investor chooses to make a play on the impending well of automation, Studebaker is right – they need to think globally. They would be well-advised to start that global search just to the left of the Pacific Ocean on any map.