From Pipelines to Profits: Distribution Models and Durable Growth in Industrial Gases

In this video, Co-Deputy Director of Research Tim Kubarych and Associate Analyst Safia Williams discuss the resilient economics of industrial gas distribution—from pipeline infrastructure to packaged delivery. They unpack how global players such as Linde and Air Liquide leverage long-term contracts, scale, and innovation to fuel consistent growth across a variety of sectors.

Humanoid Robots Are Exciting. Pneumatics Are a Better Business

When people think of industrial automation, they may envision a factory of robots that look and move like humans do. While that may well be the future of manufacturing, it’s generally not what industrial automation looks like today. Rather, automation is often as simple as using compressed air to push a piston back and forth. This type of automation is called pneumatics, and it’s one of the most cost effective and reliable options for manufacturers. Harding Loevner Analysts and Portfolio Managers Sean Contant and Jingyi Li discuss the industry’s competitive forces and the companies capitalizing on the growing need to automate labor-intensive manufacturing processes.

Industrial Strength Growth Opportunities

The Industrials sector encompasses a wide range of businesses with unique growth prospects and challenges. From commercial aerospace and machinery to industrial distribution and the auto supply chain, companies within this sector operate in distinct competitive environments where scale, adaptability, and innovation are crucial for success. In this series, Harding Loevner Industrials Analyst and Global Portfolio Manager Sean Contant, CFA, discusses some of the key growth opportunities he sees in the sector. Using the Porter Five Forces framework —central to Harding Loevner’s investment strategy—Sean explains how select companies in certain industries within the sector are using their competitive strengths to address complex challenges, increase market share, and provide innovative solutions to meet customer demands.

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Chipmaking Is Getting More Complex. Daifuku’s Smart Monorails Keep Fabs Running Smoothly

In semiconductor manufacturing, a single speck of dust poses a threat to production. It’s why cleanrooms, the sterile labs where silicon wafers get etched and cut into pieces, and then packaged as finished chips—with thousands of steps in between—contain few humans. To reduce the risk of contamination and defects, materials are largely transported by automated monorail systems that travel along the ceiling.

Source: Daifuku.
While advances in generative artificial intelligence (AI) have put a spotlight on the companies that design and manufacture chips, as well as their data-center customers, providers of cleanroom technology play an increasingly critical role in a world of high-performance computing. Not only is the industry for cleanroom automation characterized by an attractive competitive structure, but new trends and challenges in chipmaking are also improving the growth outlook for this specialized material-handling technology. One player in particular may stand to benefit, and that is Daifuku.