by Liz Ann Sonders and Kevin Gordon, Charles Schwab & Company Ltd.
The reason for the italics above is due to analysts having set the bar quite low. As shown below, from a late-June high of more than 11% year-over-year growth, the "blended estimate" (combining actual reports with estimates for not-yet-reported companies) recently sank to less than 3% before last week's uptick to 4%. That is for the overall S&P 500—excluding the Energy sector, earnings are expected to fall by nearly 4%.
Lowered bar
Source: Charles Schwab, I/B/E/S data from Refinitiv, as of 10/28/2022.
Forecasts contained herein are for illustrative purposes only, may be based upon proprietary research and are developed through analysis of historical public data.
Beat it
Descending beats
Source: Charles Schwab, I/B/E/S data from Refinitiv, as of 10/28/2022.
Misses getting hit hard
Source: Charles Schwab, Bloomberg, as of 10/28/2022.
Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Micro misses and macro headaches
Starting with a relative bright spot, the largest company in the world—Apple—pulled in record revenues of more than $90 billion during the third quarter. Executives for the most part were optimistic on iPhone demand and a continued easing of some supply constraints. Yet, despite growing sales under the weight of a 6% foreign-exchange headwind, executives are seeing more pressure ahead and expecting that drag to grow to 10% in the next quarter.
Results for other mega caps were far less sanguine. Google's parent, Alphabet, saw significant slowdowns in advertising and services revenue alongside a huge miss in operating income. It was Google's fifth straight quarter of slowing sales growth. Microsoft posted its weakest sales growth in five years, courtesy of the strong dollar, rising energy costs in Europe, and a decline in PC demand.
Amazon's operating margin and income missed estimates by a wide degree, and executives are expecting a 4.6% drag on revenue from the strong dollar. Meta reduced its guidance for the coming quarter, has started to reduce headcount, and is expecting a 7% drag on revenue from currency pressure. The company is under pressure from its own idiosyncratic headwinds—one being soaring expenses for its investment in the Metaverse—which have been exacerbated by the weakening global backdrop.
While these companies' results—among others—have given us more insight into the waning strength of the consumer and stronger grip of foreign-exchange volatility, there is still a larger question as to how much the aggressive monetary policy tightening this year will likely crimp demand moving forward. What is increasingly clear, though, is that the leadership profile for the market continues to shift dramatically relative to recent history.
Dollar demon
Dollar hits int'l sales
Source: Charles Schwab, Bloomberg, as of 10/28/2022.
Data indexed to 100 (base value = 12/31/2021). Goldman Sachs (GS) domestic Sales basket contains 50 S&P 500 stocks with the highest domestic revenue exposure. Goldman Sachs (GS) international Sales basket identifies 50 S&P 500 companies across 11 sectors with the highest international sales. Indexes are unmanaged, do not incur management fees, costs and expenses and cannot be invested in directly. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Leadership shifts and performance divergences
Case in point has been Apple's relatively muted -14% drawdown from its all-time high, a serious divergence from Amazon's -45% drop and Meta's -74% decline. As has been emphasized by the current earnings season, gone are the days (for now) where we can look at these companies with a monolithic lens. Inflation and the evaporating liquidity tide have set some companies back by a significant degree, resulting in a meaningful change for the structure of the market.
Outlook, look out?
Negative net revisions
Source: Charles Schwab, Bloomberg, as of 10/21/2022.
Citi U.S. Earnings Revisions Index measures the number of equity analyst revisions upgrades (positive) and downgrades (negative).
Stocks track earnings growth
Source: Charles Schwab, I/B/E/S data from Refinitiv, as of 10/28/2022.
4Q08's reading of -67% is truncated at -40%, 4Q09's reading of 206% is truncated at 80%, and 2Q21's reading of 96% is truncated at 60%. Forecasts contained herein are for illustrative purposes only, may be based upon proprietary research and are developed through analysis of historical public data. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Numbing numbers
Sector details
Source: Charles Schwab, I/B/E/S data from Refinitiv, as of 10/28/2022.
Forecasts contained herein are for illustrative purposes only, may be based upon proprietary research and are developed through analysis of historical public data.
CEOs' no-confidence vote
Source: Charles Schwab, The Conference Board
Measure of CEO ConfidenceTM in collaboration with The Business Council, as of 4Q22.