Ahead of the Tape: Earnings Recession Is Over, but Don't Expect Investors to Celebrate -- WSJ
14 November 2016 - 7:04PM
Dow Jones News
By Steven Russolillo
The earnings recession is finally over, but that might not be
enough to push the market higher from here.
With more than 90% of S&P 500 companies having reported
results for the latest quarter, earnings for the biggest U.S.
companies are finally growing again. Third-quarter adjusted
earnings are projected to increase 2.9% from the same period a year
ago, according to FactSet. That marks the first year-over-year
growth rate after five consecutive quarters of contractions.
Better times should be ahead, too, thanks to stabilizing oil
prices and the rebounding energy sector. Energy companies such as
Exxon Mobil Corp. and Valero Energy Corp. should benefit. Their
earnings growth is forecast to bounce back significantly in 2017
following several quarters of contractions, according to S&P
Global Market Intelligence.
And it isn't just energy companies that should rebound.
Technology titans such as Apple Inc., the biggest contributor to
S&P 500 earnings, and International Business Machines Corp. are
expecting earnings growth will return in 2017. The same should hold
true for videogame maker Electronic Arts Inc. and hard-disk-drive
maker Western Digital Corp.
But there is a difference between an earnings recession ending
and earnings growing impressively. A year ago, analysts were
calling for earnings growth of 13.1% for the recently completed
quarter. That projection fell sharply and even turned negative as
recently as September before recently bouncing back into positive
territory.
"The further out you go, the more optimistic analysts tend to
be," said John Butters, senior earnings analyst at FactSet.
History might be repeating itself. Earnings growth this quarter
is expected to improve to 3.5%, followed by 11.4% and 10.5% in the
first two quarters of 2017.
The earnings-expectation game will continue, meaning the bar
will inevitably be lowered. But investors seem to have caught on.
They haven't rewarded so-called earnings beats as much as they used
to.
For the third quarter, Mr. Butters found an S&P 500
company's stock price rose 0.7%, on average, in a four-day span
following an earnings report that beat expectations. That is
roughly half the average gain in a comparable time frame over the
past five years. Earnings misses were punished more than usual,
too.
The reason why could be because stocks are near records. That is
unusual after an earnings recession. Even if earnings keep rising,
there is no guarantee companies will be rewarded by investors.
Write to Steven Russolillo at steven.russolillo@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 14, 2016 02:49 ET (07:49 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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