Another way of gaining exposure to the mining sector is by buying into the companies which provide services such as engineering, construction and site services to miners and explorers, and Bell Potter reckons there's money to be made buying into three of these firms.
The analyst team at Bell Potter has said in its end of year wrap up to clients that iron ore and gold production is set to rise over the next three years, "benefiting services companies leveraged to mining volumes''.
They went on to say:
In exploration markets, the cycle has clearly demonstrated an inflection, with exploration facing companies reporting increased activity and demand for their services. Junior equity raisings have recently trended above the 2021 and 2011 peaks; as a leading indicator, we expect junior exploration activity to lift meaningfully over CY26.
The analyst team says while east coast infrastructure looks "patchy" going forward, key sub-sectors such as energy generation, storage and transmission and water utilities are looking good.
The rapidly expanding data centre sector would also provide tailwinds for companies in the infrastructure game.
So who do they like in the sector?
This company is a bit different to a straight mining services company given it is an underground mining contractor as well as the operator of two mining projects – the Woodlawn Zinc-Copper Mine in New South Wales and the Sulphur Springs Zinc-Copper Project in Western Australia.
The company also just last week announced it had won a $200 million contract at OceanaGold's Waihi North Project in the North Island of New Zealand.
Bell Potter said in its note to clients that the company is expected to ramp up to commercial production at Woodlawn in the March quarter of 2026, "representing a major re-rate catalyst''.
Bell Potter has a $5.20 price target on Develop Global shares, compared with the price of $4.36 currently.
IPD, the Bell Potter team said, delivered better than expected first half guidance at its recent annual general meeting, and was well-leveraged to the strong spend around data centres and infrastructure.
The said IPD had a "current strong order book and pipeline opportunities" and strong free cash flow over the next two financial years "should support de-leveraging and balance sheet flexibility to target multiple accretive bolt-on acquisitions ''.
Bell Potter has a $5 price target on IPD shares compared with $4.07 currently.
This company wins a high level of repeat business in the Western Australian engineering field, due to its reputation and quality of completed projects, Bell Potter said.
Its track record of growth is aided by bringing specialist contractors into the group, adding new customers and markets. The FY25 results saw growth in energy and emerging sectors, with revenue up by 77% to $82.5m and 175.5% to $60.6m respectively, nearly all delivered organically.
The company also has exposure to the defence sector, which should benefit from AUKUS work to begin soon.
Bell Potter has a $1.90 price target on Duratec shares comparted with $1.79 currently.
The post Bell Potter names three engineering companies to buy appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
Motley Fool contributor Cameron England has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Ipd Group. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Ipd Group. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.
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