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Aging Population Threatens Global Economy

Executives at the world’s largest asset manager are worried about rising long-term inflation, and the willingness of the Federal Reserve to save stock investors.

Blackrock Inc. published last week its Global Outlook for 2023. The report identifies three drivers that should know about, because they will reset stock and bond prices for the foreseeable future.

The analysis is bullish for On Semiconductor (ON). Let me explain.

Blackrock was an early proponent of globalization, the idea that the global economy would become more peaceful and prosperous if the world’s economies, cultures, and populations were more interdependent. The gist was a world that freely traded together would be more inclined to get along, or so the theory went.

In practice, global supply chains quickly became weaponized. Manufacturing was shipped to Asia, especially China, where leaders sought to leverage global influence in Africa and the less developed world. Financial capital gravitated to London and New York, where financiers and consultants put together offshoring schemes, and tax shelters. And the developed countries of the world binged on inexpensive goods, and low borrowing costs.

Philipp Hildebrand, chief investment officer at Blackrock, characterised this period as the Great Moderation, a four-decade period of stable economic growth and low inflation. He now believes GM is over, and that investors should brace for more volatility, and stubborn inflation.

In the Global Outlook playbook Hildebrand points to three key regime drivers that will make life miserable for world’s central bankers, and investors for the foreseeable future. These trends are now set in motion, and cannot be easily changes.

The world is getting older, due to low birth rates. Caring for the elderly is going to be expensive. It’s also going to cause shortages of trained workers. It’s also going to blow out public sector budgets, as it has in Japan since the 1980s.

Deglobalization is the systematic undoing of the global supply chains that brought lower costs of manufacturing. This trend is clear to see in the rush to politicize semiconductor design and manufacturing. Expensive new facilities being planned in Europe and the United States.

The third regime driver is the rapid transition to clean energy alternatives to fossil fuels.

The war in Ukraine quickened the adoption of non-carbon fuel sources, and it is disrupting ongoing investment in fossil fuels. Blackrock strategists argue that the unorderly transition could result in fuel shortages that will ultimately disrupt global economic activity.

There is a silver lining for investors, though.

On Semiconductor (ON) is building a lucrative business supplying chips to all facets of clean energy, including infrastructure, electric vehicles, and EV charging stations. The Phoenix, Ariz.-based company has become a major player in the production of silicon carbide, a key material for the next generation power switching required for the transition to clean energy.

In the interim, On Semi is reaping the benefits of earlier investment in the chips and components needed for the EV transition. The company reported in early August that robust demand for power management systems and sensors continue to outpace supply. Some customers have taken the unusual step of co-investing with On Semi to expand capacity. Others have extended existing contracts through 2029, as they clamor to secure supply of components they will need for future EVs.

BlackRock is not totally on board with the demand picture for EVs, or consumer spending in developed markets for that matter. Hildebrand says that the Fed will not save investors with lower interest rates when the next recession hits. This behaviour would end of the so-called Fed put, the injection of cheap money to smooth over rough patches in economic activity.

Investors should focus on the prevailing trends that are working.

At a price of $65.38, ON Semi. shares trade at 14.5x forward earnings and 3.3x sales. This is extremely inexpensive given gross margins of 46.6% and the potential of its clean energy franchise.

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