As anyone who’s had a baby can tell you, regular check-ups and measurements can help assess progress, and with fully 40% of the companies in the S&P 500 (as of Friday’s close) reporting earnings, we wanted to check in on the Q4 earnings season.
So far, this earnings season marks an extension of the same themes that drove the last few earnings seasons, namely falling earnings and sales, weak performance out of the energy sector, continued improvement in margins, and the dramatic impact of the US dollar.
The earnings and revenue recessions continue…
According to the earnings mavens at FactSet, the “blended” (combining actual results from companies that have already reported and estimated results for companies yet to report) earnings decline is tracking at -5.8% year-over-year, with the blended revenue decline currently coming in at -3.5% y/y. If these results hold, it would mark the third consecutive quarter to show year-over-year declines in earnings and fourth straight quarter of falling revenues. For what it’s worth, analysts do expect earnings and revenue growth to return in the first half of this year, though traders are understandably skeptical until results actually start to improve
Sector breakdown: Running out of Energy…
In terms of individual sectors, the energy and materials sectors are leading to the downside. Staggeringly, the energy sector is currently reporting a -78.6% decline in profits from last year, driven heavily by a -35.9% drop in revenues; the equivalent numbers for the materials sector are -24.7% and -14.9%. On the other side of the coin, the Telecom (+28.1% earnings growth and +11.9% revenue growth) and Health Care (+7.2% and +7.7%) sectors are outperforming the broader market’s results.
Margins keep beating expectations…
Of course, it doesn’t take a genius to realize that low oil prices would hurt energy companies’ profits; instead, traders focus on how different companies are performing relative to analyst expectations. On that front, the picture is more optimistic. Overall, 72% of companies have beat earnings estimates thus far, solidly above both the 1-year (69%) and 5-year (67%) averages. However, top-line sales estimates have been notably harder to beat, with only 50% of reporting companies topping analysts’ revenue expectations – this figure is in-line with the 1-year average (50%), but below the 5-year average of revenue beats (56%). In other words, companies continue to cut costs aggressively and exploit accounting gimmicks in order to overcome weak overall global growth.
And the buck is still king
As has been the case with the last few earnings seasons, the market theme for US large cap stocks has been the strength in the US dollar. Relative to Q4 of last year, the greenback is roughly 11% stronger against its major rivals, using the US dollar index as a proxy. This means that foreign sales at many of the large, multinational firms that make up the index are less valuable when translated back into US dollars than they were at this time last year. In fact, several major companies including Nike (N:NKE), FedEx (N:FDX), and Costco (O:COST) have all cited the dollar as a major headwind. Of course, the precipitous drop in oil prices continues to help some large manufacturing, consumer discretionary, and transportation companies offset the negative impact of the rising dollar.
Looking ahead…
This week will be a critical one for US companies reporting earnings. Nearly a quarter (23.6%) of S&P 500 companies will report earnings this week, including yesterday, Alphabet (Google (O:GOOGL))l, which surpassed Apple (O:AAPL) as the world’s most valuable company by market cap after the report. Other “heavy hitters” this week include Dow Chemical (N:DOW), Exxon Mobil (N:XOM), Pfizer (N:PFE), and United Parcel Service Inc (N:UPS) on Tuesday morning; General Motors Company (N:GM), Merck (N:MRK) and Yum! Brands (N:YUM) on Wednesday; and LinkedIn (N:LNKD) and Credit Suisse (N:CS) on Thursday.
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