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						Oil's drop could leave a 
						stain on earnings 
						
		 
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		 [June 24, 2017] 
		By Caroline Valetkevitch and Rodrigo Campos 
		 
		NEW YORK (Reuters) - Heading into 
		second-quarter earnings season, investors are looking for a continuation 
		of strong U.S. company results to justify high stock valuations, now 
		trading near their loftiest levels since 2004. 
		 
		However, drilling a hole into that hopeful scenario is the current bear 
		market in oil prices and an economy showing signs of growth below the 
		pace expected earlier in the year. 
		 
		"A lot of the expectation for a recovery in earnings is predicated on 
		oil prices being around $47-$50 a barrel," said Hugh Johnson, chief 
		investment officer of Hugh Johnson Advisors LLC in Albany, New York. "So 
		if you don't get those numbers, you don't get the strong earnings the 
		stock market needs. This is not trivial stuff. It creates a lot of 
		uncertainty and volatility in forecasts." 
		 
		U.S. crude futures <CLc1> have been pressured lower by a supply glut. 
		They've averaged over $48 per barrel so far this quarter, but traded 
		around $43 on Friday and are down more than 20 percent from February, 
		when they hit an 18-month high. 
						
		
		  
						
		U.S. stocks are in the ninth year of a bull run which has been fueled of 
		late by bets on pro-growth policies from U.S. President Donald Trump. 
		However, with the timetable for reforms stretching further into the 
		future, earnings are seen as a critical support for stock prices. 
		 
		With indexes near record highs, there is speculation among Wall Street 
		analysts about whether a correction is due. 
		 
		Earnings expectations have dropped for 10 of 11 industry groups since 
		early April, with only industrials looking better than they did then. 
		 
		The benchmark S&P 500 stock index as a whole is expected to deliver 7.9 
		percent profit growth, down from 15.3 percent in the first quarter, and 
		below the 10.2 percent forecast in April, Thomson Reuters data shows. 
		 
		On Thursday, Nike <NKE.N> will be the first Dow component to report 
		earnings for the most recent quarter. The season heats up in the second 
		week of July. 
		 
		Technology earnings are seen posting double-digit growth, helped by 
		gains in semiconductor companies, and financials are close behind with 
		estimated 8.1-percent profit growth. 
		 
		While lower energy prices can help some sectors such as industrials and 
		transports, as well as boosting consumer sentiment, high expectations 
		for energy earnings growth mean any stumble will be felt broadly. 
						
		
		  
						
		Energy sector profits are seen up a whopping 683 percent from a year 
		ago, when many companies posted losses, according to Thomson Reuters 
		data. Without energy, profit growth estimates drop to 4.8 percent for 
		the quarter. 
		 
		
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			Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange shortly 
			after the opening bell in New York, U.S., June 22, 2017. 
			REUTERS/Lucas Jackson 
            
			  
Expectations for the sector will probably have to come down for the second half 
of the year if low oil prices persist, said David Joy, chief market strategist 
at Ameriprise Financial in Boston. 
"The one wild card right now is the price of oil. Expectations that are baked 
into full-year forecasts assume a higher price for oil certainly than we have 
now," he said. 
 
Energy has been the weakest performing sector so far this year, with the S&P 
energy index <.SPNY> down near 15 percent. 
 
OVER-OPTIMISTIC FORECASTS? 
 
The drop in oil prices notwithstanding, some analysts have cautioned that Wall 
Street has been too optimistic about overall earnings. 
 
Michael Purves, chief global strategist at Weeden & Co, cut his 2017 S&P 500 
earnings estimates from $127 to $116, below the $131.51 consensus, as economic 
growth and inflation are not as high as expected. 
 
"I'm looking for CEOs to start taking down their forecasts for the year," Purves 
said. 
 
In fact, the Citigroup U.S. economic surprise index <.CESIUSD>, a gauge of 
economic data compared to expectations, this month fell near a six-year low. 
  
An Atlanta Federal Reserve model recently forecast second-quarter economic 
growth coming in at a 2.9-percent annualized pace, down from a previous 3.2 
percent. 
 
Another hurdle for earnings growth: declining corporate buybacks. 
 
"Over the past two years, more than 20 percent of S&P 500 issues have given at 
least a 4 percent tailwind for (earnings per share) via reduced share counts," 
Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst at S&P Dow Jones Indices, said in a 
note. 
 
For the first quarter of 2017, that rate fell to 14.8 percent of companies, and 
there are indications of "even less support" in the second quarter, he said. 
 
(Additional reporting and editing by Megan Davies; Editing by Daniel Bases and 
Nick Zieminski) 
				 
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