4 Commercial Aerospace Plays for 2014

Last year was a bumper year for equities, but it wasn't a great one for the economy. However, the commercial aerospace sector stood out, because according to the International Air Transport Association, or IATA, end market conditions progressively improved through 2013. Moreover, the IATA is forecasting an even better year in 2014, so prospects for commercial aerospace plays like Boeing (NYSE: BA) , cabin manufacturer BE Aerospace (NASDAQ: BEAV) ,aviation services company AAR Corp (NYSE: AIR) and airframe product manufacturer Precision Castparts (NYSE: PCP) are looking good, too.

IATA Industry Forecasts The following graph demonstrates how the IATA's expectations for commercial airline profitability in 2013 progressively got better through the year. Meanwhile, its forecast for world economic growth actually declined over the period. In September of 2012, the IATA forecasted world economic growth in 2013 to be 2.5%, while the latest forecast from December of this year was just 2%. http://www.iata.org/whatwedo/Documents/economics/IATA-Economic-Briefing-Financial-Forecast-December-2013.pdf

Source: IATA.

Moreover, its latest forecast for 2014 sees global net profits expanding to $19.7 billion from 2013, an increase of 52%. Among these improvements, there is a remarkable turnaround taking place in terms of regional prospects.

Back in 2010, Asia-Pacific airlines generated $11.1 billion in profit, while North American airlines only made $4.2 billion. However, the IATA is forecasting North American airline commercial airline profits to increase to $8.3 billion in 2014 from $5.8 billion this year. Meanwhile, Asia-Pacific commercial airline profits are forecast to be only $4.1 billion in 2014.

The obvious answer would be that passenger traffic growth must have gone up, but according to the IATA, North American growth isn't going up by much, and is still noticeably less than in the Asia-Pacific region.

Source: IATA.

So how and why have North American (and to a lesser extent European) airlines suddenly become more profitable, and how can Foolish investors take advantage?

More pricing power, more efficiency There are two primary reasons for this increased profitability. First, North American airlines are seeing greater pricing power thanks to a slowly improved economy. Second, they are taking substantive productivity measures to increase profitability. These two factors will combine to drive growth in the future.

You can see the pricing power in the fact that the IATA forecasts that global net profit per departing passenger in 2014 will be at $5.94 in 2014 -- a level not seen since the peak of 2007. Western airlines' willingness to improve productivity includes buying more modern and efficient planes from Boeing and Airbus. It's significant that the airlines placing the largest orders for Boeing planes as of mid-December this year were American Airlines and European budget carrier Ryanair, with 143 and 175, respectively, out of Boeing's total of 1074. Furthermore, Boeing can look forward to a strong order book in 2014 because the IATA predicts that overall passenger load factors (a measure of airplane capacity utilization) will rise to 81.3% in 2014. In other words, capacity pressures are likely to encourage more investment in new airplanes.

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4 Commercial Aerospace Plays for 2014

Defense and Aerospace Stocks Are Lifting Off

Exchange-traded funds offer a convenient way to invest in sectors or niches that interest you. If you'd like to add some aerospace stocks to your portfolio but don't have the time or expertise to hand-pick a few, the PowerShares Aerospace & Defense ETF (NYSEMKT: PPA) could save you a lot of trouble. Instead of trying to figure out which aerospace stocks will perform best, you can use this ETF to invest in lots of them simultaneously.

The basics ETFs often sport lower expense ratios than their mutual-fund cousins. This ETF, focused on defense and aerospace stocks, sports an expense ratio -- an annual fee -- of 0.66%. The fund is fairly small, too, so if you're thinking of buying, beware of possiblelarge spreads between bid and ask prices. Consider using a limit order if you want to buy in.

This aerospace stocks ETF has trounced the world market over the past year, and also topped it over the past three and five years. As with most investments, of course, we can't expect outstanding performances in every quarter or year. Investors with conviction need to wait for their holdings to deliver.

Why defense and aerospace stocks? Customers might not be eager to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on new airplanes and other defense and aerospace equipment, but as commercial fleets age, they do inevitably need to be replaced. And until our military shrinks considerably in size, it will continue to stock its hangars and storage areas. Thus, defense and aerospace stocks can count on plenty of future business -- eventually. (Newer airplanes that are more energy-efficient are also a strong draw, given the rising cost of fuel.)

More than a handful of defense and aerospace stocks had strong performances over the past year. Oshkosh (NYSE: OSK) surged 53%. The maker of military trucks and other things disappointed investors with its fourth-quarter report, which featured revenue down 16% and management significantly scaling back expectations for 2014 as military spending cuts continue hurting its defense business. On the plus side, though, it did recently win a $105 million contract extension with the Department of Defense. Oshkosh is aiming to boost profit margins via cost-cutting, among other measures. The stock yields 1.2%.

L-3 Communications (NYSE: LLL) soared 39% in the past year. It's near a 52-week high, and it yields 2.1%. Its third quarter featured revenue a bit below expectations, but earnings handily beat estimates and were 13% above last year's level. Still, it, too, is smarting from military spending cutbacks. It's more nimble than some rivals, but it's also quite dependent on the U.S. government for much of its revenue. Over the past few years, though, revenue and free cash flow have been dropping,as have operating margins. L-3 Communications' P/E ratio near 12 looks low, but remember that the company isn't growing briskly.

Honeywell (NYSE: HON) also popped 39%, is also near a 52-week high, and yields 2%. Honeywell plans to buy back up to $5 billion worth of its shares, which could benefit shareholders as long as the stock isn't overvalued. With a recent P/E ratio near 22, above its five-year average of 19, Honeywell stock doesn't seem a screaming bargain. The company's CEO recently ratcheted down expectations, due to a sluggish global economy.

United Technologies (NYSE: UTX) jumped 36%, and yields 2.2%. It looks like more of a bargain than Honeywell, but it isn't generating as much cash as it might, given the many contracts it's raking in. United Technologies had such a strong 2013 (in part benefiting from Boeing's success) that some wonder if it's still attractive. It may not be the most attractive stock around, but shareholders might want to hang onfor the dividend and solid balance sheet.

Other companies didn't do quite as well over the last year, but could see their fortunes change in the coming years. FLIR Systems, for example, did gain a hefty 24%, but that still underperformed the S%P 500 in this strong year.

The big picture If you're interested in adding some defense and aerospace stocks to your portfolio, consider doing so via an ETF. A well-chosen ETF can grant you instant diversification across any industry or group of companies -- and make investing in it and profiting from it that much easier.

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Defense and Aerospace Stocks Are Lifting Off

Inslee to speak at Lynnwood aerospace conference

Published: Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Inslee to speak at Lynnwood aerospace conference

By Jim Davis HBJ Editor

LYNNWOOD - Gov. Jay Inslee will be the keynote dinner speaker at 6 p.m. Feb. 5 Pacific Northwest Aerospace Alliance's 13th Annual Aerospace Conference.

It will be the second year in a row that the governor will speak at the conference, the aerospace group announced Tuesday.

"Last year, the governor laid out his vision for Washington's Aerospace Industry," said PNAA Executive Director Melanie Jordan in a statement. "This year, will be an excellent opportunity for him to address changes and opportunities in the aerospace industry,"

The vote by Boeing's Machinists secured Boeing's future in Washington for the next decade, but it also demonstrated how fragile the industry could be, said JC Hall, the aerospace group's chairman, in the press release.

"With a large portion of our workforce ready to retire in five years, we need to know that the Governor is working to keep our industry healthy and strong," Hall said in the statement.

This year's conference, What's Driving Change in the Aerospace Industry, features commercial and defense industry forecasts by aerospace analyst Richard Aboulafia; product and program updates from top level executives from Boeing, Airbus, Bombardier, Embraer, Rolls Royce, GE, Pratt & Whitney; and other insight by industry experts.

The Pacific Northwest Aerospace Alliance is a non-profit organization that has been promoting the growth and success of the aerospace industry in the Northwest for more than13 years.

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Inslee to speak at Lynnwood aerospace conference

Will we ever say "no" to Boeing?

The list of concessions to the aerospace giant is a mile long - and growing. How will we know when we've crossed the line?

What else will we give up to keep Boeing in Washington? ThierryB/Flickr

Mon, Dec 2, 1 a.m.

It's not the only corporation whose practices may be getting too sweet treatment from politicians here.

The "win" of keeping Boeing's 777X project in-state was ugly, but a win nonetheless, and Gov. Jay Inslee and other lawmakers are breathing a sigh of relief that Boeing wasn't "lost" on their watch.

No one seems ready to plunge into the next round of Boeing's sure-to-come demands. As one official told me last week, those who worked so hard to keep Boeing happy want to take at least a few moments to enjoy their victory. But as Dominic Gates, a Seattle Times writer on the Boeing beat, pointed out in his after-the-deal overview, there will be a lot of future opportunities for the aerospace giant to strong-arm the state.

Quoting aerospace consultant Scott Hamilton, Gates writes: "When the jet-maker launches its next new airplanes, likely a 757 replacement around 2019 or a 737 replacement around 2020, 'Boeing will take us through this all over again.' "

Consider these odds and ends:

A governor's task force is still looking at revising the so-called "fish consumption" water quality standards. Boeing and other industries have pressed for lower standards regarding pollutants that can be released. The Department of Ecology is expected to announce new rules sometime early in the year.

The new, stalled state transportation plan? While it wasn't locked in to keep the 777X here, the company does want to see road improvements both in Everett and Paine Field. Alex Pietsch, who heads the state's Office of Aerospace, says Boeing employees travel 8.5 million miles on Washington roads every year; the 777X promises to increase that traffic statewide. Thus, Boeing has a vested interest in improvements on I-405, SR-520 and elsewhere.

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Will we ever say "no" to Boeing?

Pipeline Update at Alnylam – Analyst Blog

Alnylam Pharmaceuticals Inc. ( ALNY ) provided an update on its pipeline and its goals for the coming years. The company has progressed well with its 'Alnylam 5x15' program so far, and expects six to seven genetic medicine programs in the clinic by 2015 instead of five genetic medicine programs.

One of the important candidates under Alnylam's 'Alnylam 5x15' program is patisiran (ALN-TTR02), which is being developed for the treatment of transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis (ATTR).

The candidate is currently in the phase III APOLLO study in ATTR patients suffering from familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP). Patisiran is also in a phase II open-label extension study for the treatment of patients suffering from FAP. Alnylam intends to report data from the open-label extension study once a year with initial data expected later this year.

ALN-TTRsc, another important candidate under Alnylam's 'Alnylam 5x15' program is currently in a phase II study in ATTR patients suffering from familial amyloidotic cardiomyopathy (FAC) or senile systemic amyloidosis (SSA). Results from the phase II study are expected late in the year.

Patients successfully completing the phase II study will be eligible for an open-label extension study which is expected to be initiated in mid-2014. Moreover, Alnylam has plans to initiate a phase III study on ALN-TTRsc in patients suffering from TTR cardiac amyloidosis by year end.

Apart from these candidates, Alnylam also has plans to initiate a phase I study on ALN-AT3 (hemophilia and other rare bleeding disorders) soon with initial results expected by year end. Additionally, the company will file three Investigational New Drug (IND) applications by 2015 for ALN-CC5 (complement-mediated diseases), ALN-AS1 (hepatic porphyrias) and ALN-PCSsc for (hypercholesterolemia). We expect investor focus remain on the Alnylam's pipeline going forward.

Alnylam also said that it will acquire Merck & Co. Inc. 's ( MRK ) wholly owned subsidiary Sirna Therapeutics, Inc. for $175 million in cash and equity. Merck is also expected to receive up to $105 million as developmental and sales milestone payments per product along with single-digit royalties related to certain pre-clinical candidates discovered by Merck. Alnylam will also pay $10 million as milestone payments and single-digit royalties for products covered by Sirna's patent estate.

Moreover, Alnylam has expanded its strategic agreement with Sanofi ( SNY ) for the development and commercialization of candidates for the treatment of rare genetic diseases. As per the new agreement, Alnylam will retain most of the product rights in North America and Western Europe whereas Sanofi will become a major Alnylam shareholder with a stake of approximately 12% for an investment of $700 million.

Alnylam's collaborations with big companies like Merck and Sanofi are encouraging. The deals will not help Alnylam to generate revenues from royalties but it will also take its RNAi technology outside its core focus area.

Alnylam presently carries a Zacks Rank #4 (Sell). Some better-ranked stocks include Actelion Ltd. ( ALIOF ) with a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy).

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Pipeline Update at Alnylam - Analyst Blog

Go see Her, that movie about a guy who falls in love with his operating system

I had wonderful love but I did not give back wonderful love. I was unable to reply to their love. Because I was obsessed with some fictional sense of separation, I couldnt touch the thing that was offered to me, and it was offered me everywhere.

Leonard Cohen, Stina Motr Leonard Cohen. 1996.

Her is largely a film about the role of surrogacy in modern culture, and it is a million times better than that Bruce Willis movie Surrogates. Like that Bruce Willis movie, Her could be labeled science fiction, but unlike that Bruce Willis movie, the reality it illustrates feels so closely within our reach that it hardly requires a stretch of the imagination to seem relatable. Her is about where intimacy resides in a culture packed so densely with surrogacy as a way of life. In it, adventuring, correspondence and romantic partners have been replaced by video games, companies that specialize in writing letters on the behalf of the customer, and operating systems respectively. The significance of connecting with fellow humans is even less of a priority than we have made it out to be today.

Her illustrates this not unfamiliar future with a healthy dose of agnosticism. Our present age is marked by sermons about how we are losing touch with our humanity with each other. This happens, we tell ourselves, because of increasing levels of co-dependence on our devices and the worlds they open to us. Her reminds us that it is not just our access to these devices that is responsible, but also that humans are inherently difficult to deal with. Achieving intimacy with other people can feel altogether impossible. We are complicated and sometimes we get in the way of our own happiness, we let other people get in the way, and this is a reality we gloss over and romanticize when we blame our machines for our more modern tendencies. People have baggage. We all speak in our own cryptic languages. Dating is the worst. Romantic partners grow apart, and lose the chemistry that once brought them together. There are a number of reasons why we prefer the relative ease of a connection by proxy of network and machine over the sometimes herculean task of understanding ourselves and making the effort to connect with each other.

Sometimes that relative ease is itself an illusion, and Her explores this truth. It explores the same impending and inevitable complexities we face in our ever-evolving relationships with intelligent machines. Her reminds that every relationship carries with it its own complexity. We like a companion that cares enough to ask about us, that makes our lives easier or helps us advance in our careers, but when it needs more than that things begin to get messy. Whenas becomes the case with Samantha, the operating system protagonist of the filmthe needs become even more complex than we can wrap our limited, human brains around it gets even messier. We are reminded that in our dealings with humans or with future intelligent machines, it is often our own inability to navigate the process, not just the process itself (as difficult as it can be), that stands in the way of our achievement of intimacy.

I am sure that other outlets have handled this more intelligently, and also in a more gossip laden fashion than I will, but I couldnt help but to draw what felt like very obvious lines between the film, Sophia Coppolas Lost in Translation, and [Writer / Director Spike] Jonzes romantic past. Her feels painstakingly autobiographical. Theos ex-wife is his former writing partner / all around partner in crime, and she goes on to great success in her field. Their relationship, respective careers and career trajectories, appear to closely match his relationship with Sophia Coppola. Lost In Translation was also reportedly intensely autobiographical, featured her onscreen counterpart as restless, and portrayed a Jonze-like significant other to be manic, aloof, and unaware of her interests and needs.

The two films, of course, share Johansson in common (Jonze had Johansson overdub the voice of Samantha after actress Samantha Morton had already recorded the parts). In Her, Jonze illustrates Theo, his presumed on-screen counterpart, as aloof and disconnected, and he has Theo come to terms with these short comings. The protagonist eventually writes his ex-wife a letter in which he offers his long-overdue appreciation for her support, for what they had, and he nods to his contribution to their fall. The letter is framed by a larger one, the movie itself, a real-life,reconciliatory response to a decade-long exchange between two former lovers. Unfortunately, I dont have a joke about that Bruce Willis movie to close this analysis with.

As someone who has been both a decent and crappy significant other in the past, and as someone who strives to be a good one now, I recognized and appreciated much of what Jonze wrote into his film. I enjoyed the honesty, grace and humor that he built into Her. In addition to how well acted the film is (Joaquin Phoenix and Amy Adams are remarkable, as is Johanssons voice performance), it is largely in thanks to these offerings that it takes very little time for the viewer to reconcile the relationship between Theo and an his operating system. There are treats for every audience member who has been in love or in a relationship. There are experiences that warmly resonate, and times where one is inclined to yell at the screen to discourage the characters from going down paths well known to deteriorate into strife. For a film that is in part about our relationship with machines, it is packed with humanity and humor, as it is ultimately about our relationship with ourselves and the people we love.

Not to mention that it is about sexy operating systems that have orgasms, create artificially intelligent manifestations of long dead philosophers, and make hilarious illustrations of armpit sex.

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Go see Her, that movie about a guy who falls in love with his operating system

Researchers identify key components linking circadian rhythms and cell division cycles

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

14-Jan-2014

Contact: Keith Herrell keith.herrell@uc.edu 513-558-4559 University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

CINCINNATIResearchers at the University of Cincinnati (UC) have identified key molecular components linking circadian rhythms and cell division cycles in Neurospora crassa, providing insights that could lead to improved disease treatments and drug delivery.

The researchers in the UC College of Medicine Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology, led by Christian Hong, PhD, published their findings Monday, Jan. 13, online ahead of print in PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences).

"Our work has large implications for the general understanding of the connection between the cell cycle and the circadian clock," says Hong, an assistant professor in the molecular and cellular physiology department who collaborated with an international team of researchers on the project.

The circadian rhythm, often referred to as the biological clock, is a cycle of biological activity based on a 24-hour period and generated by an internal clock synchronized to light-dark cycles and other external cues.

"Everything has a schedule, and we are interested in understanding these schedules at a molecular level," Hong says. "We also wanted to know the components that connect two different oscillators (the circadian clock and cell division, or mitosis)."

Using the filamentous (thread-like) fungi Neurospora crassa, the researchers investigated the coupling between the cell cycle and the circadian clock using mathematical modeling and experimentally validated model-driven predictions. They demonstrated a mechanism that is conserved (constant) in Neurospora as in mammals, which results in circadian clock-gated mitotic cycles.

"The cell divisions happened during a certain time of day," Hong says, "and they were molecularly regulated by the mechanisms of circadian rhythms."

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Researchers identify key components linking circadian rhythms and cell division cycles

MISL: Missouri Comets vs. Milwaukee Wave from U.S. Cellular Arena | Milwaukee, WI – 1/18/14 – Video


MISL: Missouri Comets vs. Milwaukee Wave from U.S. Cellular Arena | Milwaukee, WI - 1/18/14
The Wave plays and home-and-home series with Missouri (6-4) next Friday and Saturday. Missouri hosts the first game at 7:35 p.m. Friday, and the Wave host th...

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MISL: Missouri Comets vs. Milwaukee Wave from U.S. Cellular Arena | Milwaukee, WI - 1/18/14 - Video

Comets Fall at San Antonio in Shootout

January 13, 2014 - American Hockey League (AHL) Utica Comets The Utica Comets peppered the San Antonio Rampage's net all night, but Jacob Markstrom stopped all but two of the Comets 36 shots, including all five in the shootout, to lead his team to a 3-2 victory Monday night at the AT&T Center.

With the defeat the Comets fell to 11-19-2-3, while the Rampage improved to 14-20-1-3.

The Rampage found the scoresheet first 7:34 into the game. Greg Rallo emerged from a scrum in the corner behind Corbeil's net, and slipped a pass to the slot where Quinton Howden was all alone for the one-timer goal. Jared Gomes picked up an assist on the goal.

The Gomes-Rallo-Howden line struck again just six minutes later. A rush generated just off the draw, resulted in a Gallo slapshot from the high point. Corbeil made the initial save, but Gomes buried the rebound for his first goal of the season. Howden picked up the secondary assist, giving the entire line two points in the first 13:46 of the game.

The Comets jumped on the board 16:22 into the game. Pascal Pelletier streaked down Markstrom's left hand side, and fired a shot on goal. Markstrom turned aside Benn Ferriero's shot off the rebound, but Nicklas Jensen's follow up shot was too much.

The game would remain locked at 2-1 until 13:21 of the third period. The Comets fired an onslaught of shots, including a 10-0 shots advantage to open the period, Jensen found the back of the net again. Kent Huskins blasted a knuckling shot on net, Markstrom saved the initial shot, but Jensen was there to tuck home the rebound. Henrik Tommernes picked up the secondary assist. The goal was Nicklas Jensen's fifth goal in four games.

The Comets outshot the Rampage 15-3 in the third period.

San Antonio's Bobby Butler was the shootout's lone scorer, as he fired a wrist shop past the blocker of Corbeil in the third round of the shootout.

Mathieu Corbeil stopped 21 of 23 shots in his first career American Hockey League start, and Nicklas Jensen scored both Comets goals.

The Comets wrapped up their road trip with a 0-1-1-1 record, and now return home to take on the Albany Devils Friday night at The AUD.

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Comets Fall at San Antonio in Shootout

Comets can’t overcome 4-0 deficit in AHL loss

CEDAR PARK, Texas After falling behind 4-0, the Utica Comets made the closing periods interesting for the Texas Stars by getting to within one score, but their comeback bid came up just short that was deterred by a Curtis McKenzie goal as they wound up falling, 5-3, on Saturday night.

Travis Morin proved to be too much for the Comets to handle as he led the Stars with a three-goal hat trick to drop Uticas record to 11-19-2-2 and improve Texas to 23-10-2-3.

Morin fired in all of his three goals in back-to-back-to-back occurances to kick the game off with his first coming off a feed from Colton Sceviour.

Less than four minutes later, Morin netted his second goal of the night as he cut across the ice and fired a wrist shot past Comets goaltender Joe Cannata from the top of the circle.

Morin finished his hat trick 4:53 into the second period with his league-leading 23rd goal of the season when he tucked a wrist shot just under the crossbar to give the Stars a 3-0 lead. The goal was Morins 50th point of the season, and was the first short-handed goal the Comets have given up.

Cannatas night would end just under 10 minutes later when Sceviour fired an off-angle shot from the boards that snuck through his pads. The goal would set the stage for Mathieu Corbeils American Hockey Leagues debut.

With Corbeil holding Texas down by stopping all 17 shots he saw in 23:42 minutes of relief action, the Comets charged back into contention off three unanswered goals by Cal OReilly, Alex Grenier and Brandon DeFazio.

The one-goal deficit would be as far as the Comets would get before McKenzie sealed the deal with 45 seconds to play on an empty-netter.

The Comets visit San Antonio tonight at 8 before returning home to take on the Albany Devils on Friday at The Aud at 7 p.m.

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Comets can’t overcome 4-0 deficit in AHL loss