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		The next worry for U.S. stocks: shrinking 
		profit forecasts 
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		 [December 10, 2018] 
		By Caroline Valetkevitch 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - The growing ranks of 
		stock market Eeyores now have another reason to stay glum: Next year's 
		profit picture is darkening fast.
 
 Corporate earnings forecasts are eroding as the tailwind from the tax 
		cut fades and as investors worry the U.S.-China trade dispute could 
		upend global commerce more than it already has.
 
 Even after the second correction of the year for the benchmark S&P 500 
		<.SPX> stock index, many investors wonder whether share prices 
		adequately reflect risks of slower profit growth.
 
 Emblematic of the recent turbulence, last week the S&P 500 slid 4.6 
		percent. The previous week it notched its biggest weekly gain in nearly 
		seven years.
 
 Wall Street analysts have slammed the brakes on estimates for profit 
		growth for S&P 500 companies, which had accelerated for much of the 
		year. Two months ago, 2019 profit growth was pegged at 10.2 percent; it 
		is now seen at 8.2 percent, and growing ranks of doubters reckon growth 
		could slow to half that rate or less.
 
 "It may be more in the line of 3 to 4 percent," said Paul Nolte, 
		portfolio manager at Kingsview Asset Management in Chicago, adding the 
		market has yet to price that in.
 
 "The risk to that estimate is the downside. Right now, the equity market 
		is focused more on trade than they are earnings."
 
		
		 
		
 Morgan Stanley's outlook warned of more than a 50 percent chance of a 
		"modest earnings recession," or two quarters of year-over-year profit 
		declines. That last occurred when earnings declined for four straight 
		quarters starting in the third quarter of 2015.
 
 In recent weeks, top strategists at RBC Capital Markets, BNP Paribas and 
		Bank of America Merrill Lynch have forecast 2019 earnings per share 
		growth below the rate compiled by Refinitiv, an aggregate of estimates 
		from analysts covering individual companies.
 
 Among the deepest profit downgrades have been for the technology and 
		communications sectors that had carried the market higher through the 
		latest stages of the bull market.
 
 Tech delivered third-quarter earnings per share growth of 29.2 percent 
		from a year earlier, but the latest forecasts for next year's third 
		quarter see that plunging to 2.2 percent and averaging just over 4.9 
		percent for all of 2019. [L1N1YB25L]
 
 The recently formed communication services sector, which includes such 
		heavyweights as Facebook <FB.O> and other social media companies facing 
		increased regulatory scrutiny, is now expected to deliver profit growth 
		of 6.7 percent in 2019, down from an Oct. 1 estimate of 11.6 percent.
 
 "Tech earnings will be there. They're just not going to lead," said 
		Alicia Levine, chief market strategist at BNY Mellon Investment 
		Management.
 
		SHIFT IN OUTLOOK
 Strong earnings and economic growth had helped stocks rebound from steep 
		drops in February and kept most investors optimistic about market 
		valuations. At the time, earnings forecasts were rising fast as 
		companies were ramping up buybacks and spending plans following hefty 
		tax cuts approved by Congress in late 2017.
 
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			A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in 
			New York, U.S., December 7, 2018. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid 
            
			 
            Near the end of 2018, the bond market has been flashing warning 
			signs about a possible economic slowdown, while investors fret about 
			nagging trade tensions.
 Strategists now fear the economy could slow while interest rates are 
			still rising. Federal Reserve policymakers are widely expected to 
			raise interest rates in December for a fourth time this year, but 
			the focus is on how many rate hikes will follow in 2019.
 
 Another concern for stocks: companies have been warning for a couple 
			of months about rising wages eating into profit margins.
 
 Some strategists did cite reduced profit growth forecasts as one of 
			the reasons stocks sold off recently. The S&P 500 is trading at 15.8 
			times forward earnings compared with 17.3 at the start of October, 
			according to Refinitiv data.
 
 Others said earnings growth, even at a much-reduced rate, will be 
			healthy enough to support the market.
 
 "Where we're getting to is a healthy, sustainable level from 
			something that was running really very hot," said Jonathan Golub, 
			chief U.S. chief investment strategist at Credit Suisse Securities. 
			He said analysts also tend to overestimate long-range profit growth, 
			so investors should not be surprised by reduced forecasts.
 
 Semiconductor-related companies including Micron Technology <MU.O>, 
			Applied Materials <AMAT.O> and Lam Research <LRCX.O> are the biggest 
			drags on tech earnings estimates for 2019, while DISH Network Corp <DISH.O> 
			is among the biggest weights on communication services, based on 
			Refinitiv data.
 
 Global demand for chips has been slowing, and investors are 
			concerned the U.S. President Donald Trump could enact tariffs on 
			imports of electronics products manufactured in China that are made 
			with chips from U.S. companies.
 
             
            
 Technology and communication services stocks have been among the 
			hardest hit this quarter, with the S&P 500 technology index <.SPLRCT> 
			down more than 14 percent since the end of September.
 
 (Reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by Dan Burns and David 
			Gregorio)
 
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