Earnings beats underwhelm as Wall Street looks for good news
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[February 02, 2022] By
Caroline Valetkevitch
NEW YORK (Reuters) -U.S. earnings news has
been less impressive this reporting season than in recent quarters,
giving some investors another reason to worry after Wall Street's
tumultuous start to the year.
Disappointments from companies like Goldman Sachs Group, which missed
quarterly profit expectations, and Netflix Inc, which gave a downbeat
forecast, have added to recent pressure on stocks, while reports from a
number of heavyweights are still expected.
Google parent Alphabet Inc provided some upbeat news after the bell on
Tuesday, with its shares up more than 7% as it reported
higher-than-expected fourth-quarter sales. At the same time, PayPal
Holdings Inc shares sank more than 17% as the online payments company
failed to match up to its pace of growth a year earlier. Amazon.com Inc
and Meta Platforms Inc are slated to release earnings later this week.
S&P 500 companies are still beating analysts' earnings expectations for
the fourth quarter of 2021, but they are doing so by a much lower margin
than over the past year when companies were just bouncing back from the
depths of the pandemic.
With results in from more than 180 companies as of early Tuesday, S&P
500 companies in aggregate are reporting earnings 4.3% above
expectations, well below the average of 16% for the past four full
quarters but in line with the 4.1% average going back to 1994, according
to IBES data from Refinitiv.
Estimated year-over-year profit growth for S&P 500 companies for the
fourth quarter has gone up slightly since the start of the reporting
period. Growth was forecast at 25.6% as of Tuesday versus 22.3% at the
start of January, based on Refinitiv data.
"It was huge beats last year and that's shrunk," said Nick Raich, CEO of
The Earnings Scout. "It's partially reverting back to normal, but it's
also the supply-chain pressures and inflationary pressures taking a
toll."
Wall Street is trying to find its footing after the recent sharp
selloff. The S&P 500 had its worst January since 2009, while the Nasdaq
posted its biggest January percentage drop since 2008 following
increasing worries about rising interest rates.
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Stock Exchange is seen over an entrance to the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) on Wall St. in New York City, U.S., March 29, 2021.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Growth stocks like large-cap technology have been among the hardest hit, and
investors are focused on whether earnings this year will be able to support the
market.
While down from about 22 at the start of the year, the forward price-to-earnings
ratio for the S&P 500 is at 20.1, still well above its long-term average of
15.5, according to Refinitiv DataStream.
Companies have been facing higher prices and labor costs, and some companies may
be struggling to pass on those costs at this point, said Rick Meckler, partner
at Cherry Lane Investments, a family investment office in New Vernon, New
Jersey.
Among them, Oreo cookie maker Mondelez International Inc last week said it
expects to face a larger impact from supply-chain problems in its key North
American segment in the current quarter.
To be sure, profit growth is seen as a positive overall for the market.
"The tug-of-war between earnings and rising interest rates continues. Earnings
are trending higher, while rising interest rates are compressing valuation
multiples and increasing price volatility," Terry Sandven, chief equity
strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management in Minneapolis, wrote in a recent
note.
Yet just 78.8% of the reports so far this season have beaten analysts' earnings
estimates, compared with an average of 84% of companies beating over the past
four quarters, Refinitiv's data showed.
S&P 500 earnings are expected to gain by about 8.5% in 2022 after growth of
roughly 50% in 2021, based on Refinitiv data.
(Reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch in New YorkEditing by Alden Bentley and
Matthew Lewis)
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