While the US has a decent shot at finishing the earnings season flat to slightly positive and avoiding an “earnings recession” as results have improved in recent weeks, the same is not true for Europe. Continue reading “European Earnings Get “Less Bad”…”
Category: Earnings
Q1 Earnings Better and Better…
Data Source: Factset
This was a big week for earnings. Q1 earnings estimates bumped up again from -2.3% last week to -0.8% today. This puts a flat to positive year on year result on the table. We’re at a 76% beat rate which is above the long term average. Continue reading “Q1 Earnings Better and Better…”
European (Stoxx 600) Q1 Earnings Estimates Drop Again
Continue reading “European (Stoxx 600) Q1 Earnings Estimates Drop Again”
Q1 “as reported” Earnings: High Beat Rate, Low Margins…
Data Source: Factset
Continue reading “Q1 “as reported” Earnings: High Beat Rate, Low Margins…”
Q1 Operating Earnings “Margin of Safety” Improves
We got a nice bump up in Q1 “Operating Earnings” expectations from Howard Silverblatt at S&P Global last week (from $36.82 to $37.23). This is helpful because it puts a $2.20 cushion from the possibility of having 2 Continue reading “Q1 Operating Earnings “Margin of Safety” Improves”
Q1 Earnings Estimates bump up again…is it enough for takeoff?
Data Source (above): Factset
Q1 earnings estimates bumped up 20bps from -4.1% last week to -3.9% this week. The 12 mo. forward multiple has expanded to 16.8x which is above the 5yr average of 16.4x and the 10 year average of 14.7x
Continue reading “Q1 Earnings Estimates bump up again…is it enough for takeoff?”
European (Stoxx 600) Q1 Earnings Estimates Drop Again
Estimates for European Q1 earnings have dropped from -1.6% to -3.4% in the past 2 weeks. This puts Europe’s estimates modestly better than the U.S. – which are at -4.3% for Q1 as of Friday.
While this is a big drop, expectations and sentiment remain very low for the region – so with a normal beat rate of ~3% European earnings could come in ~flat year on year. This would exceed the current excessive pessimism in sentiment for the region.
Revenues will come in positive as a function of the weak Euro. The early beat rate is constructive. We’ll know more as the data/forward guidance comes in over the next few weeks.
Q1 Earnings Estimates bump up modestly…
Q1 earnings estimates bumped up 10bps from -4.2% last week to -4.1% this week.
As we stated last week, the bar is now so low that companies don’t even have to jump to get over it. They can stumble over like a drunken frat boy and still win. That’s the good news.
The bad news is that with estimates down to -4.1% for Q1 versus -3.9% two weeks ago and +2.8% on December 31, it is unlikely that earnings will be flat for Q1 – even after they beat. They will most likely be negative year on year.
Smart folks will say, “that’s priced in – it’s all about guidance.” I agree, to an extent. Where I’m cautious is if we get another sequential drop (Q4 2018 vs. Q1 2019) in OPERATING earnings (versus ‘as reported’).
Data Source (below): Howard Silverblatt – S&P Global
The significance of this is that it would signal a deterioration in the underlying economy last seen only in late 2007 and 2000. As you can see, we have a $1.79 “margin of safety” against this happening on Operating Earnings (difference between Q4 2018 final – $35.03 and Q1 2019 est – $36.82).
The difference is that while “as reported” earnings tend to beat by ~3%, “operating earnings” have recently DROPPED as the reporting period progressed. For example, operating earnings estimates for Q4 2018 were estimated at $38.82 with just four weeks left of reporting in early March and they finished out $3.79 LOWER by the end of the Q1 reporting season last week (for a 15.34% sequential drop from Q3 2018-Q4 2018).
So while it is not our base case that we will get a second sequential drop, it is now within the realm of possibility. Whether that yields an outcome similar to 2007/2000 periods when this last happened is to be determined, but I would err toward unlikely as the pressure will be on for the fed to ease.
Furthermore, the 2/10 part of the curve has not even inverted yet (stock market peaks are usually ~1.5yrs AFTER 2/10 inversion, so the countdown clock has not even started). The 2/10 had been inverted for almost 2 years prior to the double sequential operating earnings drops in 2007 and 2000.
I covered these subjects extensively in this recent article:
UPDATE (newest data): Bull vs. Bear Death Match: Why Q1 Operating Earnings are “Make or Break”
European (Stoxx 600) Q1 Earnings Estimates Drop Again
Data Source: Thomson Reuters
Estimates for European Q1 earnings have dropped from -1.6% to -3.2% in the past week. This puts Europe’s estimates in-line with the U.S. – which is at -3.9% for Q1 as of Friday. Continue reading “European (Stoxx 600) Q1 Earnings Estimates Drop Again”
Earnings Estimates Drop Again: Good News or Bad?
Data Source (above): Factset
The bar is now so low that companies don’t even have to jump to get over it. They can stumble over like a drunken frat boy and still win. That’s the good news. Continue reading “Earnings Estimates Drop Again: Good News or Bad?”