Wall Street Week Ahead: Investors await BlackRock
earnings after blistering second quarter market rally
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[July 11, 2020] By
Saqib Iqbal Ahmed
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Investors will watch
next week's earnings from BlackRock <BLK.N>, the world's largest asset
manager, for a snapshot of how the industry performed during the second
quarter's dramatic rebound in global financial markets.
Most expect numbers from industry bellwether BlackRock and other asset
managers to reflect the sharp stock market rebound. The S&P 500 <.SPX>
rose 20% in the second quarter after falling as much in the first three
months of 2020 as the coronavirus pandemic slammed the economy.
Since the performance of asset managers tends to be tied to how markets
fare, investors see a range of risks ahead, including further
acceleration of U.S. coronavirus cases and potential market volatility
around the Nov. 3 presidential election.
Still, "just on a market level, the asset managers are inmuch better
shape coming out of the second quarter than theywere coming out of the
first quarter," said Macrae Sykes, global financial services sector
analyst at Gabelli Funds.
BlackRock is scheduled to report on July 17, with T. Rowe Price <TROW.O>,
WisdomTree Investments <WETF.O> and Invesco <IVZ.N> among asset managers
reporting in the following weeks.
Analysts expect a strong recovery in the sector's assets under
management (AUM) in the second quarter, driven by rising financial
markets and improving risk appetite. Higher levels of AUM mean more fees
and stronger margins and earnings, analysts said.
BlackRock's assets fell to $6.47 trillion at the end of the
first-quarter, from $7.43 trillion at the end of 2019.
Improving fund flows are also likely to help second-quarter earnings for
the group, analysts said. Fixed income flows reversed back into positive
territory in April and stayed that way throughout the quarter while
equity flows improved from March lows, according to Jefferies.
Analysts at Morgan Stanley recently raised their estimate for
second-quarter earnings-per-share for traditional asset managers by 19%.
Most analysts expect BlackRock to show robust flows into its $2 trillion
exchange-traded funds business, with strength in the fixed income and
alternatives ETFs offsetting outflows from equities.
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The Fearless Girl statue is seen outside the New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) in New York City, New York, U.S., June 11, 2020.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Investors will also look for details on BlackRock's role in the Federal
Reserve's debt-buying efforts as the central bank sought to stabilize a
corporate bond market roiled by economic fallout of the pandemic.
The firm's own ETFs accounted for a large share of corporate bond ETFs it bought
on behalf of the Fed as part of the central bank's relief program. BlackRock
waived asset management fees on ETFs purchased on behalf of the Fed.
BlackRock's shares are up about 9% year-to-date, outperforming a 3% decline in
the S&P 500. The broader sector has not fared as well, with the Refinitiv U.S.
Investment Management & Fund Operators Price Return Index <.TRXFLDUSPINVM> is
down about 13% for the year.
Some investors worry asset managers could take a hit if a resurgent pandemic
forces parts of the United States to halt or reverse the reopening of their
economies.
Analysts at Goldman Sachs last week said the U.S. economy would shrink by 4.6%
in 2020, from an earlier forecast of a 4.2% contraction.
"We remain cautious with equity markets nearing post Covid-outbreak highs amid
risk of a market correction should a second coronavirus wave impede the pace of
the global economic recovery," analysts at Deutsche Bank said in a note to
clients about the sector.
The U.S. presidential election could also heighten market volatility. A victory
by Democratic challenger Joe Biden could threaten Republican policies championed
by President Donald Trump and generally favored by Wall Street, including lower
corporate tax rates and fewer regulations, analysts said.
A separate indication of the financial industry's health may come next week from
several big Wall Street banks set to report earnings, including Goldman Sachs
Group Inc <GS.N> and Morgan Stanley <MS.N>.
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and David Gregorio)
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