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Posté par Craig Basinger en avr. 29ème, 2024

Earnings Optimism

There are three things you should rarely ever bet against: the Leaf’s opposing team in the playoffs, the American consumer’s ability to spend, and corporate profits. As we are now about halfway through U.S. earnings season, once again, positive surprises remain the norm; 81% have beaten. It's a bit better than the 20-year average of 75%. The fact is that companies are good at managing analysts’ expectations. At least enough to beat them when the numbers hit the tape. The size of the positive surprises has been encouraging as well, at just under 10%. The highest surprise magnitude in some time.

One of our reservations on the sustainability of this market rally over the past couple of quarters has been the flat earnings revisions. In other words, global markets are up over 20% but earnings estimates have remained flat or tilted down slightly. More often than not, markets trend in the same direction as earnings revisions. Earnings get revised up when companies raise guidance and/or analysts become more encouraged about growth prospects. That is a good thing for markets. Obviously, downward revisions are bad. Yet estimates have remained very flat as markets marched higher, a challenging combination.

Markets usually follow earnings revisions... not recently though

Of course, the reason earnings matter so much is they are everything in the longer term. Sure, the market can move up a lot or down a lot as the optimism or pessimism about the future waxes and wanes. But all this tends to average out, leaving earnings growth as the real driver of market performance. We have used the chart below a few times over the years, but it really does highlight where market returns come from. In any single year, the red bar dominates as fear/greed causes the market multiple to rise or fall. Yet once you look at 10 or 20-year periods, the red bar disappears as it is all about earnings growth (yellow bar), plus some dividends.

S&P 500 return decomposition: In the long term, it's all about earnings growth


Given the importance of earnings, a good earnings season provides a welcome boost to markets. The question remains whether this positive season will translate into rising revisions for forward estimates. Thus far, it has not. Global earnings, as indicated by the earlier chart, show a continued slight downward trend for 2024, with 2025 showing stability or a slight upward trajectory. Focusing solely on the U.S. market, the situation is quite similar. Forecasted 2024 earnings remain at $243, unchanged since January 1. However, 2025 shows improvement, with consensus estimates rising from $270 to $275 thus far this year.

Delving into the sector level, it becomes apparent that only a few sectors, including Energy, Info Tech, and Communication Services, are driving the overall market earnings upward. The rise in Energy earnings aligns with the upward trend in commodity prices, while the growth in Info Tech earnings reflects increased spending on AI technology. The inclusion of Communication Services may seem peculiar at first, but it is primarily due to Alphabet's performance. Meanwhile, traditional telecommunication companies are experiencing a decline in estimates.

A few sectors are helping lift 2025 estimates

So where do earnings go next? There are some decent headwinds for U.S. earnings. One is a higher U.S. dollar, running a bit higher than last year. Given the amount of earnings that come from overseas, once translated back to USD, a strong dollar is a negative. The bigger drag may be interest expense. Last quarter, S&P 500 companies paid $68 billion in interest expenses, which is up from $59 billion a year ago. Variable interest obligations have already adjusted to the higher rate world, but the fixed-term obligations will only reset once they mature. In other words, even if yields/rates start to come down later this year, interest expenses will likely keep rising for many quarters to come.

Wages and other corporate input costs are also a negative for future earnings. On a positive note, wage pressures have been trending lower. The Atlanta Fed Wage Growth Tracker peaked at 6% in 2022 but has been steadily falling for over a year down to 4.7%. That is not bad, considering that historical norms were in the 3-4% range.

Despite these headwinds, there are some very positive factors as well. U.S. earnings tend to be highly correlated to manufacturing activity. S&P 500 year-over-year earnings growth tracks PMI (Purchasing Managers survey) with a six-month lead. Which means the uptick in PMI data we are seeing today bodes well for earnings growth in the coming months.

An upward move in PMI data bodes well for future earnings growth

The economic data, globally, has been improving. This should result in further earnings growth and upward earnings revisions. The Citigroup economic surprise index for the world has been positive for most of 2024 so far. This means that economic data is coming in better than consensus estimates. And if you ask copper, with its honorary PhD in economics, maybe things are even heating up more so. Given how many areas of economic activity consume copper, its price moves are often a precursor for the move in the economy. Copper prices have recently risen through $4/lb, a level not seen since 2021/early 2022 as the economy emerged from the pandemic.

The final good news may be inflation. Inflation sucks; it is a tax on your future spending power or the value of your wealth. But for earnings, inflation is good. It means companies are able to raise prices, and when Producer Prices (PPI) are rising slower than Consumer Prices (CPI), that is an earnings-healthy combination.

Stable or minor uptick in core CPI, with a lower core PPI, is good for earnings

Final Thoughts

Earnings probably have more going for them than against them these days, which is a good news story. Hard to say if it will be enough to maintain the gains of the past few quarters, but it certainly would be helpful. The U.S. earnings season is halfway through the Q1 season, and it has been good. Hopefully, this trend persists. And, hopefully, the Leaf’s playoff trend doesn’t.

— Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments

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Sources: Charts are sourced to Bloomberg L. P.

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Craig Basinger, CFA

Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments. With over 25 years of investment experience, Craig combines an educational foundation in economics & psychology with years of experience in both fundamental and quantitative research. A long-term student of the markets, Craig’s thoughts and insights can be seen in his Market Ethos publications and through his regular contributions on BNN.

Craig and his team bring a transparent and cost-efficient approach to investment management. The team provides asset allocation OCIO services and directly manages over $1 billion in assets. The team manages dividend mandates, quantitative risk reduction strategies and asset allocation services.