logo


Earnings: Where the Q2 Surprises Could Be
Tuesday, July 07, 2009 11:03 AM


(Source: Business Week)trackingBy David Bogoslaw

The pullback in equity indexes on July 2 in response to the larger-than-expected drop in June nonfarm payrolls shouldn't have been a surprise, as light preholiday trading probably exacerbated the data-driven sell-off. But the disheartening employment snapshot doesn't necessarily bode any worse for second-quarter corporate earnings than what most investment strategists and economists were already anticipating.

Earnings for the companies in the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index are expected to be down 35.5% in the second quarter from a year earlier, according to the July 2 report by the Thomson Reuters (TRI) Proprietary Research Group. Earnings season is scheduled to start with Alcoa (AA) reporting results on July 8. The biggest year-over-year declines in profitability -- a 79% plunge -- is expected in the materials sector, which shouldn't surprise anyone who has followed the deterioration in the housing and commercial real estate markets.

Thomson Reuters' highest earnings forecasts are for a 2% decline for the health-care sector and a 6% drop for consumer-staples companies. A 29% decline is projected for consumer-discretionary companies.

The fact that 467,000 jobs were lost in June -- 100,000 more than the market expected and a substantially bigger decline than in May -- disappointed those who assumed the pattern of diminishing job losses since the January peak would continue. But Art Hogan, chief market analyst at Jefferies & Co. (JEF) in Boston, says the huge drop from 741,000 jobs lost in January to 345,000 in May "set us up for disappointment."

It doesn't surprise Hogan that companies are reluctant to hire new workers until they see significant improvement in the economy. But he doesn't see a clear tie between the magnitude of continuing job losses and earnings. "It's anybody's guess whether we're down 34% year over year for the second quarter or 24%. I think we're positioned to have some upside surprises," though that may not be enough to ensure further upside to stock prices, he says.

Setting the Second-Half Bar Low The near-absence of pre-announcements from companies over the last three or four weeks suggests the results will be fairly good, says Phil Orlando, chief equity market strategist at Federated Investors (FII) in New York. But he says he's not expecting much positive guidance for future quarters from corporate managers. "There's no reason for them to do so" in the current environment, he says.




(0)
No Comments
Post Comment
Name:  
Alert for new comments:
Your email:
Your Website:
Title:
Comments:
   
 
 
 
 
   
 

  
Related Press Releases
Advertisement
Popular Articles
Advertisement
Partner Center
Fundamental data is provided by Zacks Investment Research, market data is provided by AlphaTrade. , and Commentary and Press Releases provided by Quotemedia