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Halliburton Company (HAL): This Humanoid Robot Stock Will Ride a $30 Trillion Opportunity According to Morgan Stanley

We recently compiled a list of the 15 Best Humanoid Robot Stocks That Will Ride A $30 Trillion Opportunity According To Morgan Stanley. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Halliburton Company (NYSE:HAL) stands against the other humanoid robot stocks.

Over the course of the last century, the makeup of modern day society and the world as we know it has significantly changed. Humans living in the first quarter of the 20th century were just starting to get used to automobiles and long distance air travel was still a distant dream for most people.

Now, with the age of artificial intelligence seemingly upon us, the world has changed. AI, a technology exclusive to science fiction in just the past decade, is now a reality even though its highest firm, i.e. artificial general intelligence, is far from being a reality. Similarly, while factories in the 20th century had to rely on workers for most of their production, now, automation is in full swing.

No where is the impact of this clearer than in the factories of Elon Musk's car company. The electric vehicle billionaire has often described his attempts at establishing a viable production base for electric vehicles as "hell," and now, he believes that the future of the world lies in the hands of humanoid robots. So much so that Musk believes that by selling $1 trillion of humanoid robots annually, his company can reach an unbelievable market value of $25 trillion. Right now, it's valued at $708.7 billion after having lost 8.96% year to date, and the combined value of the S&P 500 is $45.7 trillion.

Musk aims to have the first version of his firm's Optimus humanoid robot in small scale production early next year and start selling the humanoid robot to other companies in 2026. A simple humanoid isn't what one of the world's richest men is talking about though, since the key to his plan of selling robots is autonomy. This is the key valuation driver, believes Musk, as he shared during the Q2 2024 earnings call:

And it takes the valuation, I think, to some pretty crazy number. ARK Invest thinks, on the order of $5 trillion, I think they are probably not wrong. And long-term Optimus, I think, it achieves a valuation several times that number.

Ark Invest, Cathie Wood's hedge fund which filed $11.2 billion of investments with the SEC for Q2 2024, is also quite bullish on humanoid robots. Calling humanoid robots as generalizable robots, Wood's firm believes that they represent a $24 trillion revenue opportunity. This opportunity is split even between household and manufacturing robots, with the investment firm outlining that even a 50% take rate coupled with a 50% productivity boost could lead to a $7.1 trillion revenue opportunity for humanoid robots. Looking ahead, Ark Invest believes that humanoid robots will "have grown to 10% of the number of humans in the manufacturing workforce" by 2030 - in an era where cheap "robots in human form-factors have begun to populate households" to "address a third of household chores" and be an attractive purchase because of the time that they help people save.

Cathie Wood and Elon Musk aren't the only ones who are convinced about the potential that humanoid robots offer. Another big believer is the investment bank, Morgan Stanley. It believes that the biggest potential of humanoid robots is the cost savings that they can offer. As per analyst Adam Jonas' estimates, these robots can "bring about cost savings of roughly $500,000 to $1 million per human worker over 20 years." These savings will come at a hairline of a fraction of the cost, with the bank's estimates sharing that they could cost anywhere between $10,000 to $30,000 to manufacture.

The investment bank's estimates also believe that by 2030, America could have as many as 40,000 humanoid robots helping humans. Talking about overall usage, the industrial and other uses of humanoids could lead to a wage impact of $1 billion. These wage impacts grow as we move further down the future, and peak in 2050 when the bank believes that the humanoid population will be at an unbelievable 68 million for a wage impact of a whopping $3 trillion. Of course, the robots that the bank has envisioned aren't your everyday run of the mill equipment.

These will use artificial intelligence, which naturally expands the investment options for investors looking to profit from this potential growth. As per analyst Ed Stanley, the list of potential contenders for investment as humanoid robot stocks includes "companies making the generative AI that will power the robots’ brains, the mechanics that make their bodies run, and the battery storage needed to power them. Further development in those three areas will be key to achieving humanoid commercialization.."

If you thought that we were done with trillion dollar estimates for the humanoid robot industry, you'd be wrong. Another such estimate comes from the management consulting firm Roland Berger. It believes that if the sector scales according to optimistic projections, then by 2050, 50 million humanoid robots could generate $1.5 trillion in revenue. However, the firm does caution that this optimism is contingent on "heavily dependent on technological progress and the regulatory environment" as regulatory scrutiny of humanoids is benign right now as the majority of them are currently prototypes.

Our Methodology

We used Morgan Stanley’s Humanoid 66 stock list. for our list of the biggest beneficiaries of the humanoid robot race. This list is divided into three categories, humanoid enablers and beneficiaries, enablers, and beneficiaries. From these three, we selected the top stocks from the beneficiaries list. If you're interested in the other two categories, be sure to check out $30 Trillion Opportunity: 15 Best Humanoid Robot Stocks to Buy According to Morgan Stanley.

For these stocks, we also mentioned the number of hedge fund investors. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter’s strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 275% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 150 percentage points (see more details here).

A drilling rig in the desert with an orange sunset in the background.

Halliburton Company (NYSE:HAL)

Number of Hedge Fund Investors  in Q1 2024: 38

Halliburton Company (NYSE:HAL) is another key player in the global oilfield services industry. Like its peer and rival Schlumberger, it can benefit from self designing humanoid robots that are customized to industry requirements or by simply providing robots to its customers for their oil drilling activities. A key point for Halliburton Company (NYSE:HAL) is the fact that it has focused more aggressively on robots than its peer. For instance, it announced a well construction automation contract in 2023, holds the third highest number of patents globally for underwater oil exploration robots, and kept up the pace in 2024 by signing a deal for a tractoring robot called MicroRig. Like other well services firms, Halliburton Company (NYSE:HAL)'s stock performance depends on the health of the oil industry and its ability to maintain market share in an industry dominated by a few companies and with little avenues for product differentiation. The shares were under pressure in late August and early September as recessionary worries coupled with costs of a cyberattack spooked investors.

Carillon Partners mentioned Halliburton Company (NYSE:HAL) in its Q4 2023 investor letter. Here is what the firm said:

"Halliburton provides equipment and services to the global energy industry. The company’s shares underperformed during the quarter, largely due to downward pressure on crude oil and natural gas prices. Despite this recent move, ongoing discipline among North American shale producers could continue supporting relatively healthy activity growth at current commodity price levels, which should provide stability to service providers such as Haliburton. The company is also poised to benefit from the ongoing, multi-year international and offshore upstream investment cycle that is less dependent on short-term swings in commodity prices."

Overall HAL ranks 10th on our list of the best humanoid robot stocks to buy. While we acknowledge the potential of HAL as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and doing so within a shorter timeframe. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than HAL but that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock.

 

READ NEXT: $30 Trillion Opportunity: 15 Best Humanoid Robot Stocks to Buy According to Morgan Stanley and Jim Cramer Says NVIDIA ‘Has Become A Wasteland’.

 

Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.