The industrial sector has been a solid performer for much of this year. In recent weeks, the group has added momentum and some of that upside is attributable to transportation stocks.

For example, the iShares Transportation Average ETF (NYSEArca: IYT) is up more than 11%, giving devotees of the Dow Theory reason to smile.

According to the Dow Theory, IYT may still plod along as the Dow Jones Industrial Average trades above key levels. The Dow Theory stipulates that if an upward trend in one of its industrial or transportation averages increases above a previous high, it is accompanied by a similar advance in the other index.

Related: Not-So-Great Expectations for Industrial ETFs

According to the U.S. Bureau of Transportation, the volume of freight transported by road, rail, air, barge and pipelines has been flattening or lower since the end of 2014, Reuters reports. Meanwhile, stubbornly low energy prices may help the transportation industry cut down on costs.

Although the aerospace and defense industry is perceived as being beholden to Uncle Sam’s whims, the allure of late-cycle sectors, including industrials, in a rising rate environment remains in place. Industrials perform well when interest rates rise because rising rates can go hand-in-hand with economic growth.

Related: Government Programs Send Aerospace ETFs Flying

In addition to political rhetoric, potential catalysts for aerospace ETFs include include, renewed airline pricing power evidenced by higher ticket prices, and more fees paid per traveler, increased airline profitability, new aircraft program launches and continued demand for aircraft models and technology.

The U.S. Global Jets ETF (NYSEArca: JETS), the lone dedicated airline ETF, is another transportation to consider. JETS is higher by 12% this month.

“From a technical perspective, the rally in transports and delivery stocks has been evident all year, according to Chris Verrone, head of technical analysis at Strategas Research Partners. Verrone said the top-weighted stocks in the sector like FedEx and UPS are showing growth, which he said is a bullish sign for the space as a whole,” reports CNBC.

Airlines account for 19.7% of IYT’s weight while freight and logistics and railroad operators combine for over 54% of the ETF’s weight.

Bullish moves for some big-name transportation stocks “come even as truck tonnage fell in October for the second straight year-over-year decline, according to the American Trucking Association,” notes CNBC.

iShares Transportation Average ETF (NYSEArca: IYT)