Industrials Are the Boring Trade Quietly Outperforming Everything – Here Is Why That Continues

Hey there, bargain hunter. Nobody is putting Caterpillar on a magazine cover. Nobody is building Reddit threads about Eaton’s power management backlog. And that is precisely why the industrial sector has become one of the most quietly compelling setups heading into the second half of 2026 – it is generating real earnings growth with almost no narrative premium baked into the valuation.

Scoreboard

The S&P 500 Industrials sector (XLI) has returned approximately 14% year-to-date through May 2026, outpacing the broader index on a risk-adjusted basis. Caterpillar (CAT) reported Q1 2026 operating cash flow of $2.1 billion. Eaton (ETN) raised its full-year 2026 EPS guidance to a range of $11.80 to $12.20, citing data center and utility electrical infrastructure demand. Deere (DE) guided fiscal 2026 net income between $5.0 and $5.5 billion despite softer agricultural equipment demand, supported by margin discipline and financial services contribution.

The Real Reason This Is Interesting

Three structural tailwinds are converging simultaneously for U.S. industrials: grid modernization spending tied to electrification and AI data center power demand, continued infrastructure bill disbursements flowing into construction equipment utilization, and a manufacturing capex cycle that has not meaningfully slowed despite higher-for-longer interest rate expectations. Eaton’s electrical segment backlog is the clearest expression of this – it stood at approximately $11 billion entering 2026, a record level.

Metrics That Matter

  • Caterpillar trailing twelve-month free cash flow yield: approximately 4.2% at current prices
  • Eaton electrical segment organic revenue growth: 16% year-over-year in Q1 2026
  • Deere equipment operations operating margin: 19.8% in the most recent quarter
  • XLI forward price-to-earnings: approximately 21x, a modest premium to the 10-year average of 18x but supported by above-trend earnings growth

Bull, Base, Bear

Bull: Grid capex accelerates further as AI power demand exceeds current utility planning models. Industrials re-rate toward 24x forward earnings. Base: Current backlog converts cleanly, free cash flow compounds at mid-single digits annually, dividends grow. Boring and effective. Bear: A hard economic landing cuts construction activity and agricultural income simultaneously, compressing multiples and pressuring guidance. Cyclical risk is real and should not be dismissed.

Action Plan

Eaton is the highest-conviction name in the group for bargain hunters who want exposure to the electrification theme without paying software-tier multiples. Caterpillar is the value anchor – not cheap in the traditional sense, but the free cash flow yield provides a margin of safety that most growth names cannot match. Scale in on broad market weakness rather than chasing strength.