July 15, 2010, 10:21PM EST
Analysts Pare Revenue Growth Expectations
Investors may not be able to count on robust rates of sales growth to boost earnings in coming quarters
By David Bogoslaw
Equity analysts and investment strategists have been closely watching corporate revenue trends since last summer to see what's driving any improvement in earnings. But investors may not be able to count on improving sales growth as a way to pump up profits: Analysts are dialing back expectations for revenue growth for some of the world's biggest companies.
In a July 13 market commentary, Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at BNY ConvergEx Group, an investment technology provider, published data showing that analysts' consensus revenue estimates for the 30 stocks in the Dow Jones industrial average for the second, third, and fourth quarters of 2010 have been declining since April or May. Forecasts were lower in July than in April or May for 21 companies of the Dow 30 for the second quarter, for 22 for the third quarter, and for 19 for the fourth quarter, the report said.
The trend toward lower revenue expectations is present in the broader market. In the three months leading up to July 15, 48.7 percent of companies in the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index with available data had their revenue estimates cut, vs. 39.3 percent in the comparable period leading up to Apr. 30 and 37.1 percent in the three months leading up to Jan. 29, according to Bloomberg data. The start of fourth-quarter earnings releases is typically mid-January, while first-quarter earnings are released beginning in mid-April.
Colas has been tracking analysts' projections for revenue growth for the past year and says that until April those numbers had continued to climb "every single month, month in and month out," reflecting analysts' expectations for further improvement in quarterly earnings. But the trend over the past two months has flattened and is now declining. That's coincided with an 8.0 percent pullback in the S&P 500 index between Apr. 15 and July 15, and Colas believes there's a link between the two.
"For the first time since the [March 2009] market lows, analysts now realize they have overshot on revenue expectations and now are starting to pull them back in," he says. "Earnings expectations have not declined, so analysts have cut revenue expectations but have given companies more credit for [continuing] cost cuts."
IMPACT ON STOCKS
Doubts about the strength of revenue growth over the past year could pose problems for continuing advances in stock prices. "What do you pay for earnings if you're not sure what the structural growth rates are? That's a big, big question," says Colas. "One proxy for structural growth is revenue growth."
While two-thirds of the 30 Dow components seems like a large proportion, the index contains a lot of blue chip companies whose sales are highly correlated to U.S. gross domestic product, says Jeffrey Kleintop, chief market strategist at LPL Financial in Boston. As GDP projections for 2010 have moderated, it makes sense that consensus estimates for revenue growth would follow suit, he says. On July 14, the Federal Reserve lowered its economic growth estimate for 2010 to 3 percent to 3.5 percent from a forecast of 3.2 percent to 3.7 percent given in April.
It's fair to wonder whether the increasing percentage of downward revisions reflects the extent to which analysts may have been blindsided by the European sovereign debt crisis and the slowdown in China, not to mention the soft patch that the U.S. economy has hit. It may be that analysts' optimism about economic growth at the start of a new year tends to fade as the year wears on, which is borne out by patterns in 2009 and so far in 2010, says Peter Nielsen, manager of the Sextant Core Fund (SCORX) at privately held Saturna Capital in Bellingham, Wash.
Another thing to keep in mind: "There's a lot of noise" in the year-over-year comparisons for revenue due to the absence of growth drivers such as cash for clunkers and other government stimulus programs that boosted companies' sales in 2009, says Nielsen. That may be one reason for the conservative revenue numbers coming from many brokerage analysts, he adds. Nielsen thinks year-over-year comparisons will become more difficult as the year progresses and expects "very modest" revenue gains in the third quarter.
It also makes sense that analysts would be paring their revenue estimates around the one-year anniversary of what most economists agree was the bottom of the economic cycle, says Craig Peckham, equity product strategist at Jefferies & Co. (JEF). It's logical to conclude that revenue growth will disappoint investors as year-over-year earnings comparisons become more challenging later this year, he says.
REASSURING EARNINGS REPORTS
The central issue is that investors are unwilling to pay as much for earnings growth driven more by cost-cutting than by improvement in sales. "What you pay for an earnings multiple for cost-cutting is less than what you pay for revenue growth because cost-cutting has to stop somewhere" while revenue growth has "a longer runway," says Colas.
Encouraging second-quarter earnings reports may be enough to stanch the flow of negative revisions and confirm the view that analysts have reduced estimates too far on concerns about Europe, as well as doubts about consumer spending in the U.S., says Jefferies' Peckham. The performance of some equity market bellwethers seems to suggest that analysts may be relying too heavily on pessimistic macroeconomic data that have come out in the last two months, he adds.
Alcoa (AA) reported earnings of 13 cents per share on July 12, beating the Street's forecast by a penny, on a 22.2 percent rise in revenue from a year earlier. On July 13, Intel (INTC) posted a profit of 51 cents per share, up from 18 cents a year earlier and beating analysts' expectations by 8 cents. The microchip manufacturer's revenue rose $2.7 billion, or 33 percent, from a year earlier, exceeding the consensus forecast by $549.9 million, or 5.5 percent. Intel projected third-quarter revenue of $11.2 billion to $12 billion, the lower range of which was ahead of the consensus estimate by $289.35 million, or 2.7 percent, a day prior to the earnings release.
In making the transition from recovery to sustainable growth, the U.S. economy faces some key obstacles such as Europe's fiscal problems and the weak domestic labor market, according to a midyear outlook report by LPL Financial published on July 12. While U.S. banks are fairly insulated from European debt woes, LPL said that U.S. exports and business spending are vulnerable to a pullback in global economic growth that could result from another freeze of liquidity and trade, as well as to the euro zone slipping back into recession due to cuts in government spending, tax hikes, and higher borrowing costs.
TYPICAL RECOVERY SLOWDOWN
Kleintop thinks analysts were caught by surprise by negative macroeconomic data on home sales, retail sales, and job creation. That's not unusual since analysts tend to focus more on microeconomic data related to companies they cover than what's happening in the broader economy. But the fact that the economy has hit a soft patch a year into the recovery is typical of each of the past several recoveries, he says. Each time, the soft period didn't halt the expansion, but it did slow the pace of economic growth and result in a flat stock market for about a year, he says.
Another source of confusion for the market is the divergence between robust manufacturing data and a resurgence of caution among consumers. While the manufacturing strength is encouraging, that's a small part of the economy relative to consumer spending, which accounts for roughly 70 percent of GDP. The fact that the dominant sector is so sluggish "makes this recovery somewhat fragile and susceptible to a downside shock," says David Joy, chief market strategist at RiverSource Investments. He thinks consumer spending will probably remain soft, making a 3.0 percent gain in GDP the best the U.S. can muster for the foreseeable future.
It's worth noting how questions about economic growth have been translating into stock performance, he says. "We're noticing valuations within the market are very compressed. Investors are saying large caps are no better than small caps, that high-quality stocks are no better than low-quality ones," he says. "That tells us where you want to be is in large-cap, high-quality stocks," which have more reliable earnings growth and tend to pay dividends and aren't selling at a premium to lesser-quality names as they usually would.
But by focusing on revenue growth, investors may be overly conservative in their outlook for earnings growth. U.S. companies slashed costs dramatically at the bottom of the cycle, paving the way for outsized earnings growth once revenues recover even modestly, says Peckham. "Companies have been able to create cost structures with a ton of operating leverage. If you've got a model with good operating leverage, your earnings should go up a lot faster than your revenues," he says.
CORPORATE OUTLOOK WATCH
Second-quarter earnings, which have just begun to be reported, are likely to ease market jitters as key economic questions such as the impact of Europe's debt and growth problems are put in perspective, says Kleintop. Although many companies in the S&P 500 export goods and services to Europe, most of the demand from overseas in the past year has come from Asia. Large U.S. companies can still generate strong double-digit profit growth without help from Europe, he says.
Saturna's Nielsen is particularly eager to hear comments from pharmaceutical executives on earnings conference calls to get a sense of the impact they expect fiscal austerity measures in Europe to have on their European sales. He's deeply skeptical of the confidence sell-side analysts have in European governments' willingness to continue to pay up for drugs and joint replacements based on aging demographics in those countries, in the face of their fiscal difficulties.
Conference calls should also provide more clarity on the tangible costs of health-care and financial reform as companies disclose what they think the impact of these regulatory changes will be on their businesses, says Kleintop. "Once you can define them, they start to lose some of their potency to sway sentiment," he says. That could help sustain the recent stock rally. While the market seems stuck in a broad range, he says the S&P 500 could see further gains of 5 percent to 7 percent before another round of profit-taking kicks in.
The increasing number of downward earnings revisions doesn't bode well for stock market gains in 2010 relative to 2009. Roughly 200 companies in the S&P 500 have had downward revisions in the past three months, vs. 250 that have had upward revisions, according to data that Kleintop has been watching. Three months ago, only 150 companies had had downward revisions vs. 300 that had had upward revisions. The percentage of total analyst revisions that are positive "moves in lockstep with the year-over-year performance of the S&P [500 index]" going back 30 years, he says.
The steam that's come out of revenue growth expectations makes the 2011 consensus forecast for aggregate earnings of $96 per share for the S&P 500 look less and less realistic, says RiverSource's Joy. With the broad market now trading at around 12 times that number, even if you scale revenue growth back slightly, stocks still seem inexpensive, he says. That makes him think there's a cushion for equities even if revenue growth isn't robust enough to generate the earnings analysts are expecting.
Bogoslaw is a reporter for Bloomberg Businessweek's Finance channel.
http://www.businessweek.com/print/investor/content/jul2010/pi20100715_477248.htm
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Showing posts with label Earnings Concerns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Earnings Concerns. Show all posts
Monday, 19 July 2010
Sunday, 15 November 2009
Earnings Season Investor Importance
If you are a buy and hold investor then you should not be very concerned about the earnings season since its focus is on short-term goals. Earnings season affects the prices over the short term. So, it is important to active traders who may seize different opportunities.
http://www.stock-market-investors.com/stock-investing-basics/earnings-season-basics.html
http://www.stock-market-investors.com/stock-investing-basics/earnings-season-basics.html
Tuesday, 7 April 2009
Earnings Concerns Push Shares Lower
Earnings Concerns Push Shares Lower
By JACK HEALY
Published: April 6, 2009
Wall Street took losses on Monday after four consecutive weeks of wins as traders hunkered down for a rough corporate earnings season.
Technology shares fell on reports that the computer giant I.B.M. had withdrawn its $7 billion offer to buy Sun Microsystems, which makes computer software and servers. Shares of I.B.M. fell 0.7 percent to $101.56, while Sun fell 22.5 percent to $6.58 a share as investors raised questions about the next step for the company.
The Dow Jones industrial average finished down 41.74 points, or 0.5 percent, at 7,975.85. The wider Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index fell 0.8 percent, or 7.02 points, to 835.48. The Nasdaq declined 15.16 points, or 0.9 percent, to 1,606.71.
The losses ate into last week’s 3 percent gains in the Dow and the S.& P. 500.
Financial companies fell about 3 percent, according to Standard & Poor’s financials index after a report from the banking analyst Mike Mayo, who recently joined Calyon Securities after leaving Deutsche Bank. Mr. Mayo, who is known for his bearish but independent analysis, predicted that banking loan losses this year compared with their total loans would “increase to levels that exceed the Great Depression.”
He rated 11 major and regional banks as sell or underperform. Shares of Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup fell slightly.
Defense companies including Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and Raytheon rose as investors speculated that they would fare well under an overhauled Pentagon budget. On Monday, the Defense secretary, Robert M. Gates, outlined broad proposed changes in how the military spends.
With the major indexes up more than 20 percent since their March lows, analysts say earnings season could pose an important test of investor confidence in the stock market.
On Tuesday, the aluminum maker Alcoa will report its quarterly earnings after the market closes, reprising its role as the first major company to do so.
“What investors want to hear from executives — and what they may not get — is that things improved through the quarter,” said Jeffrey N. Kleintop, chief market strategist at LPL Financial. “The worry is we may not get that tone, that they might continue to take down guidance in the coming quarters.”
The price-to-earnings ratio on the S.& P. 500 is about 12 to 13, making stocks look cheap compared with the days when stocks sold for 20 times earnings, or more. But some analysts argue that while stock prices may look cheap, expectations of profits and revenues do not reflect the true scope of the global economic downturn.
Stock markets were lower in Europe. The FTSE 100 in London, the DAX in Frankfurt and the CAC 40 in France were all down just less than 1 percent.
The Treasury’s 10-year note fell 10/32, to 98 17/32. The yield, which moves in the opposite direction from the price, rose to 2.92 percent, from 2.89 percent late Friday.
Following are the results of Monday’s Treasury auction of three- and six-month bills:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/07/business/07markets.html?_r=1&ref=business
By JACK HEALY
Published: April 6, 2009
Wall Street took losses on Monday after four consecutive weeks of wins as traders hunkered down for a rough corporate earnings season.
Technology shares fell on reports that the computer giant I.B.M. had withdrawn its $7 billion offer to buy Sun Microsystems, which makes computer software and servers. Shares of I.B.M. fell 0.7 percent to $101.56, while Sun fell 22.5 percent to $6.58 a share as investors raised questions about the next step for the company.
The Dow Jones industrial average finished down 41.74 points, or 0.5 percent, at 7,975.85. The wider Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index fell 0.8 percent, or 7.02 points, to 835.48. The Nasdaq declined 15.16 points, or 0.9 percent, to 1,606.71.
The losses ate into last week’s 3 percent gains in the Dow and the S.& P. 500.
Financial companies fell about 3 percent, according to Standard & Poor’s financials index after a report from the banking analyst Mike Mayo, who recently joined Calyon Securities after leaving Deutsche Bank. Mr. Mayo, who is known for his bearish but independent analysis, predicted that banking loan losses this year compared with their total loans would “increase to levels that exceed the Great Depression.”
He rated 11 major and regional banks as sell or underperform. Shares of Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup fell slightly.
Defense companies including Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and Raytheon rose as investors speculated that they would fare well under an overhauled Pentagon budget. On Monday, the Defense secretary, Robert M. Gates, outlined broad proposed changes in how the military spends.
With the major indexes up more than 20 percent since their March lows, analysts say earnings season could pose an important test of investor confidence in the stock market.
On Tuesday, the aluminum maker Alcoa will report its quarterly earnings after the market closes, reprising its role as the first major company to do so.
“What investors want to hear from executives — and what they may not get — is that things improved through the quarter,” said Jeffrey N. Kleintop, chief market strategist at LPL Financial. “The worry is we may not get that tone, that they might continue to take down guidance in the coming quarters.”
The price-to-earnings ratio on the S.& P. 500 is about 12 to 13, making stocks look cheap compared with the days when stocks sold for 20 times earnings, or more. But some analysts argue that while stock prices may look cheap, expectations of profits and revenues do not reflect the true scope of the global economic downturn.
Stock markets were lower in Europe. The FTSE 100 in London, the DAX in Frankfurt and the CAC 40 in France were all down just less than 1 percent.
The Treasury’s 10-year note fell 10/32, to 98 17/32. The yield, which moves in the opposite direction from the price, rose to 2.92 percent, from 2.89 percent late Friday.
Following are the results of Monday’s Treasury auction of three- and six-month bills:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/07/business/07markets.html?_r=1&ref=business
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