These stocks may reap significant gains by addressing Big Tech's essential water requirements.
Written by Emily J. Thompson, Senior Investment Analyst
Updated: Dec 12 2025
0mins
Should l Buy DD?
Source: MarketWatch
- Columnist's Mailbag: Charlie Garcia shares selected emails and comments from readers regarding his articles.
- Water Purity Concerns: A reader points out that achieving semiconductor water purity may be hindered by the high costs of exchange media, such as reverse-osmosis membranes and ion-exchange resins, rather than just filtration and chemical treatments.
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Analyst Views on DD
Wall Street analysts forecast DD stock price to fall
10 Analyst Rating
8 Buy
2 Hold
0 Sell
Strong Buy
Current: 50.040
Low
44.00
Averages
49.30
High
59.00
Current: 50.040
Low
44.00
Averages
49.30
High
59.00
About DD
DuPont de Nemours, Inc. is engaged in providing advanced solutions that help transform industries. The Company serves various markets, including healthcare, water, construction, and transportation. The Company’s IndustrialsCo segment is a provider of engineered products and integrated solutions primarily serving medical, including packaging and specialty medical devices, water filtration, worker safety, automotive, including electric vehicles, aerospace and building product end markets. The IndustrialsCo segment offers medical packaging, medical silicones, specialty medical devices, water purification and separation, water filtration and purification resins, flexible packaging products, nonwovens, aramids, construction materials, auto adhesives and fluids.
About the author

Emily J. Thompson
Emily J. Thompson, a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) with 12 years in investment research, graduated with honors from the Wharton School. Specializing in industrial and technology stocks, she provides in-depth analysis for Intellectia’s earnings and market brief reports.
- Weak Demand Impact: The chemicals industry is facing challenges due to soft consumer spending and inventory de-stocking, particularly in the building and consumer electronics markets, leading to an overall decline in demand that negatively affects company performance.
- Deteriorating Market Conditions: Slow economic recovery in Europe and China, coupled with a sluggish real estate market, exacerbates the weak demand for chemical products, especially against a backdrop of high inflation and interest rates.
- Self-Help Measures Implemented: Industry players are taking actions such as cost-cutting and price increases to navigate challenges; while these measures may help sustain margins, the short-term market environment remains tough.
- Bleak Industry Outlook: The Zacks Chemicals Industry Rank stands at 184, placing it in the bottom 24%, indicating a pessimistic outlook for the coming months, with the industry underperforming both the S&P 500 and the broader basic materials sector.
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- Spin-Off Strategy: Middleby plans a tax-free spin-off of its food processing segment in February 2025, aiming to enhance shareholder value through independent management and capital structure, thereby positioning it as a primary acquisition vehicle.
- Financial Performance: The commercial foodservice segment boasts an EBITDA margin of 27%, while the food processing segment has grown from $3 million in revenue in 2005 to over $800 million, demonstrating strong growth potential but facing challenges with declining margins.
- Market Valuation: Based on conservative estimates, the enterprise value of both segments is around $11.5 billion, and after accounting for $1.9 billion in net debt, the equity is valued at approximately $9.6 billion, highlighting a significant gap compared to the current market cap of $8.5 billion.
- Share Buyback Program: Middleby has reduced its share count by 6.4% through the first three quarters of 2025, utilizing $540 million from the sale of its residential kitchen segment, which is expected to further enhance shareholder returns and improve margins in the food processing segment.
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- Geopolitical Shock: The U.S. and Israel's military strikes on Iran have triggered significant market volatility, with investors uneasy about future developments, leading to a spike in oil prices on Friday and heightened concerns over potential crude supply disruptions from the Middle East.
- AI Impact Intensifies: As financial firms like Block laid off nearly half their workforce, fears of AI-induced white-collar job losses escalated, resulting in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq dropping nearly 1% and 3.4%, respectively, marking their worst monthly performance since March 2025.
- Chip Stocks Decline: Despite Nvidia reporting better-than-expected quarterly results, its shares fell nearly 6.7%, reflecting a broader market rotation away from hardware stocks, with Broadcom also declining nearly 4%, indicating waning investor confidence in the chip sector.
- Financial Stocks Under Pressure: A report from Citrini Research warned that rapid AI adoption could lead to double-digit unemployment by 2028, causing financial stocks like Capital One and Wells Fargo to suffer significant losses of 6% and over 8%, respectively, amplifying concerns about consumer health.
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- Spin-Off Strategy: Major industrial players like Honeywell, DuPont, and Johnson & Johnson are executing spin-offs to unlock shareholder value, with Middleby planning a tax-free spin-off of its food processing segment in February 2025, which is expected to enhance its market competitiveness.
- Acquisition and Integration: Middleby has successfully increased the food processing segment's revenue from $3 million in 2005 to over $800 million by acquiring small equipment companies and integrating their operations, demonstrating strong growth potential in the commercial foodservice sector.
- Financial Performance: With annual revenue of $2.4 billion from its commercial foodservice segment, Middleby aims for the spun-off food processing segment to become a primary acquisition vehicle, although it must prove its profitability to achieve a higher market valuation despite currently generating less than $1 billion in revenue.
- Market Valuation: Preliminary estimates suggest the enterprise value of both segments is around $11.5 billion, and after accounting for net debt, the equity value is approximately $9.6 billion, highlighting a significant gap compared to the current market cap of $8.5 billion, with the spin-off aimed at closing this gap.
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- AI Investment Focus: Jim Cramer emphasized the significance of AI stocks during the Investing Club meeting, particularly highlighting Nvidia as the gold standard in AI computing, with its stunning quarterly results reinforcing the notion of an ongoing Fourth Industrial Revolution.
- Corning's New Strategy: After visiting its Kentucky factory, Jim learned about Corning's ambition to enhance data center connectivity by replacing copper with fiber optics, indicating a strong growth trajectory in the data center market that could drive future company performance.
- Eaton's Acquisition Plans: Eaton's strategy to spin off its eMobility unit and acquire Boyd Thermal aims to bolster its competitive edge in liquid cooling technology, which is crucial for managing heat in AI chips, thereby enhancing its market position.
- Alphabet and Amazon Performance: Alphabet stands out in the AI sector with its strong YouTube and cloud computing divisions, while Amazon's AWS cloud business is accelerating, although both face capital expenditure pressures, they are still viewed as solid long-term investment opportunities.
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Calpers Overview: The California Public Employees’ Retirement System (Calpers) is the largest pension system in the U.S. by assets under management.
Recent Changes: A recent securities filing indicates that Calpers made significant adjustments to its holdings in the fourth quarter.
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