Megacap earnings to test fledgling U.S. stock rebound
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[October 22, 2022] By
Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Earnings reports from
the four biggest U.S. companies by market capitalization in the coming
week may test a nascent rally that has seen stocks claw their way back
from yet another low.
Apple, Microsoft, Google-parent Alphabet and Amazon account for a
combined 20% of the weight of the S&P 500 and more than a third of the
Nasdaq Composite.
Investors view the growth giants as bellwethers for how corporate
America is faring during a year in which inflation has soared, pushing
the Federal Reserve to quickly enact a series of jumbo-sized rate hikes
that bruised markets and raised fears a recession may be coming.
“If these megacaps can’t do well, then the question is: who can do
well?” said Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment strategist at BMO Wealth
Management. (Graphic: Megacaps market values vs stock market.
The S&P 500 is up nearly 5% from its Oct 12 closing low for the year
after posting its biggest weekly gain since late June. Even with stocks'
latest rebound, the index has dropped 21% so far in 2022, on track for
its biggest decline since 2008.
Resilient corporate profits have been one bright spot this year, though
doubts are growing over how sustainable they will be. With the bulk of
S&P 500 companies still to report, third-quarter profits are estimated
to have climbed 3.1% versus the year-ago period, which would be the
weakest performance in two years, according to Refinitiv IBES, while
earnings growth expectations for 2023 have fallen to 7.2% from 7.8% on
Oct 1.
Next week's reports from the four megacaps may show whether companies
with dominant positions can post solid performance despite worries of a
potential economic downturn.
Because of their heavy weightings, "if those stocks don’t get it done,
that puts pressure on the indices to continue to go down," said Chuck
Carlson, chief executive officer at Horizon Investment Services.
Microsoft and Alphabet are due to report on Tuesday, with Amazon and
Apple set for Thursday.
Apple shares are the only ones of the megacaps that have outperformed
the broader market this year. Shares of the iPhone maker, which account
for a 7% weight in S&P 500, are down about 17% in 2022; Microsoft and
Amazon are each off roughly 28%, Alphabet is down 30%.
Despite those steep losses, investors have maintained exposure to the
megacap stocks. Actively managed U.S. mutual and exchange-traded funds
held 11.41% of their portfolios in those four stocks combined as of the
most recently available data, versus 11.44% at the end of 2021,
according to Morningstar Direct.
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Traders work on the floor of the New
York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., October 17, 2022.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Investors have been drawn to the large companies broadly because of
their financial strength and competitive advantages that, in theory,
will drive profits even during uncertain economic times.
Still, only Apple has topped analyst estimates for earnings and
revenue in both of their most recent quarterly reports, according to
Refinitiv data.
"The bar is higher for Apple because it has outperformed and because
you haven’t seen the earnings blink yet,” said Walter Todd, chief
investment officer at Greenwood Capital.
Questions loom over the other companies' key market areas, including
personal computers for Microsoft, advertising spending for Alphabet
and consumer strength for Amazon.
All three rely on cloud computing businesses, which will be in focus
next week, according to Charlie Ryan, partner and portfolio manager
at Evercore Wealth Management.
“Cloud would be the pillar that one would put their hopes on when
they report,” Ryan said. “It has been continued strength for quite
some time now and any deviation from that would be a concern.”
Meanwhile, soaring U.S. bond yields are pressuring valuations and
complicating the picture for tech and other growth stocks, whose
expected future earnings are discounted steeply by higher yields.
Yields continued to rise this week, with the yield on the benchmark
10-year Treasury note hitting a fresh 14-year high.
All four stocks command higher valuations than the S&P 500, which
trades at nearly 16 times forward earnings estimates. The P/Es for
Apple and Microsoft are both about 22 times, Alphabet trades at 17.5
times, while Amazon sits at 60 times, according to Refinitiv
Datastream.
“Those stocks have typically sold at earnings multiples that are on
the higher side,” said Carlson, of Horizon Investment Services.“How
they are going to continue to perform from here gives some insight
into what investors are ultimately willing to pay for growth
stocks.”
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and David
Gregorio)
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