Submitted by Mark Hanna
Courtesy of MarketMontage. View original post here.
More on the vastly lowered expectations for Q1 earnings growth in S&P 500 in this WSJ story. We can see how far expectations for the quarter have dropped since October even as the stock market has surged. Usually you’d want price and earnings growth to be going in the same direction. Now to be fair, back in September/October the thought process was Europe was going down the toilet AND the U.S. had a great chance of recession, but strangely as both those were put off the table, earnings expectations DROPPED. You’d think it would be the opposite no?
Please keep in mind this estimate of almost no growth in the S&P 500 in Q1 includes Apple – so you can see the S&P 499 (ex 1) is going to face a struggle. It is also key to remember this data when the breathless anchors on financial infotainment declare “so and so company beat expectations by X%!!!”. Yes the much lowered expectations of March… not the ones from September/October.
(Too early to talk about it, but the real earnings bubgaboo is Q4 – analysts have completely backloaded the year’s EPS growth into Q3, and especially Q4 – apparently we’re going to see 4-5% GDP growth starting in October if you believe this bottoms up analysis!)
Via WSJ:
- Analysts have been lowering expectations for both first-quarter and full-year earnings. They now expect earnings to show average growth of 0.95% over a year earlier in the first quarter.
- That would be the lowest rate of year-to-year growth since the end of the financial crisis, and down from expectations of 4.5% in early January, according to S&P Capital IQ. As recently as late September, analysts were looking for 10% growth.
- By comparison, S&P 500 earnings rose 8.4% in the fourth quarter and 18% in the third quarter.
- For the first quarter, just three of the S&P 500’s 10 sectors are expected to report increased earnings, according to S&P. They are industrials, consumer staples, and technology, which analysts say will benefit from Apple‘s surging earnings.
- Corporations have already fired workers and sliced expenses to keep profit margins high. But, with the global economy still sluggish, revenue gains will be hard to come by.
U.S. multinational profits have been warmed by a potent cocktail of emerging market growth, global labor and tax arbitrage (including firing many U.S. workers), massive government deficit spending (esp. in China and the U.S.), and the like. Many of these tailwinds have slowed considerably….
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