Asian companies earnings estimates get boost from consumption hopes
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[August 11, 2023] By
Gaurav Dogra and Patturaja Murugaboopathy
(Reuters) - Analysts are raising earnings estimates for Asian companies
for the first time in four months as easing price pressures boost
consumption while receding fears of a recession in developed markets is
expected to help to lift export revenues.
Equity analysts have upgraded Asian companies' forward 12-month net
profits by 2.3% over the past month, based on Refintiv data. That
compares with a meagre 0.7% increase in global companies' profit
estimates in the past month.
"The Asian profit picture is improving slowly but surely," said Manishi
Raychaudhuri, Asia-Pacific head of equity research at BNP Paribas. Some
of the key drivers are domestic consumption, a likely capital spending
cycle, and hopes of a policy stimulus in China, Raychaudhuri said.
Also helping to lift estimates were strong earnings performance by Asian
companies in the second quarter so far. Half of the region's companies
have reported their March-June quarter earnings, with 56% of them
beating consensus estimates.
In most markets, margin expansion has been playing a major role in
driving overall earnings growth, HSBC analysts said.
Across sectors, consumer discretionary led with 2.8% of earnings
upgrades over the past month, while utilities and financials sectors
also got an upward revision of 2.5% and 1.4%, respectively.
China's tortuous post-pandemic recovery has cast a shadow across the
world, with firms ranging from automakers to machinery makers warning of
slowing earnings in the world's second-biggest economy.
Refinitiv data, though, showed that analysts have turned positive on
China's forward 12-month earnings, lifting the consensus earnings
estimates by 0.5% over the past month after three straight months of
cuts.
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A huge electric stock quotation board is
seen inside a building in Tokyo, Japan, December 30, 2022. REUTERS/Issei
Kato
The majority of the upgrades followed a Politburo meeting, where
China's top leaders pledged policy support, focusing on boosting
domestic demand and signaling on more stimulus steps.
Rajat Agarwal, Asia equity strategist at Societe Generale, said
China's earnings estimates have been resilient in 2023 with growth
of 20% expected, despite the economic slowdown.
"A potential policy support can boost both the market sentiment and
earnings."
Substantive actions will need to follow policymakers' words to help
shore up shaken confidence in China, investors and analysts said.
Sunil Tirumalai, an emerging markets and India strategist at UBS,
said the announcements after the Politburo meetings appear growth
oriented, and have positive incremental messaging on key areas like
property.
"We see China market performance picking in the coming months –
especially given the low expectations and valuations."
While the MSCI Asia-Pacific index climbed 4.6% last month, taking
the year-to-date gains to about 10%, the index's forward
price-to-earnings ratio languished at 14.08, still below last 3-year
average of 14.3.
Timothy Moe, chief Asia Pacific strategist at Goldman Sachs, said
earnings would be the main source of returns for Asian markets from
here on.
"Markets are past the hope phase in the cycle, where valuations
expand in anticipation of fundamental improvement and are now in the
growth phase, where earnings delivery is the key performance
driver."
(Reporting By Patturaja Murugaboopathy and Gaurav Dogra in
Bengaluru and Ankur Banerjee in Singapore. Editing by Jane Merriman)
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