by Paul Eitelman, Russell Investments
On the latest edition of Market Week in Review, Chief Investment Strategist for North America, Paul Eitelman, and Head of AIS Portfolio & Business Consulting Sophie Antal Gilbert discussed early results from the start of third-quarter earnings season in the U.S. They also chatted about credit growth and property-sector weakness in China and reviewed the latest numbers on U.S. inflation.
U.S. Q3 earnings growth already surpassing expectations
Third-quarter earnings season in the U.S., which began the week of Oct. 11, is off to a strong and encouraging start, Eitelman said, noting that so far, S&P 500 reporting companies are generally beating expectations by a wide margin. āWith only a few days of results, earnings-per-share growth is already tracking two percentage points ahead of consensus expectations, at 32%,ā he stated. In the course of an entire earnings season, growth expectations are typically upgraded by about five percentage pointsāso being nearly halfway to that mark in just a few daysā time is quite a feat, Eitelman said.
The strong growth in earnings is especially good news for investors, he added, because by most standard valuation measures, the U.S. equity market is fairly expensive at the moment. āThis means that, going forward, investors probably arenāt going to see much in the way of returns from multiple expansion,ā he said. Rather, theyāll have to rely on strong earnings growth to drive equity returnsāand the early results suggest this wonāt be a problem, Eitelman remarked. āExceptional earnings growth certainly was the key story during the first and second quarters of 2021āand itās very encouraging to see this trend continuing,ā he stated.
Could Chinaās property-market woes lead to an economic slowdown?
Shifting gears to China, Eitelman said that recent developments pertaining to the countryās slowdown in credit and its indebted property sector have trended more negative in scope. For instance, he noted that Chinese credit growthātypically one of the more reliable indicators of Chinese economic activityāmissed consensus expectations during September, with essentially no growth observed.
āChinaās been on a recent trend of decelerating credit growth, but analysts were hoping for a turnaround in September, due to recent supportive measures from policymakers. That didnāt happenāand itās certainly a bit disappointing for the countryās short-term macroeconomic outlook,ā Eitelman remarked.
Meanwhile, Chinaās property market has been making plenty of headlines over the past few weeks, he noted, mainly due to the debt woes of real-estate developer Evergrande. However, the problems in the nationās property sector arenāt limited to just Evergrande, Eitelman explained, noting that a number of leveraged Chinese property developers are constrained in their ability to borrow money to finance ongoing operations. āA handful of these developers have either missed a coupon payment on an offshore bond, delayed a payment or warned about missing a paymentāall of which are signs that Chinaās property-market issues are starting to become a little bit broader,ā he stated.
The situation merits close watching, Eitelman said, with some concerns that weakness in the property sector may lead to a slowdown in Chinese economic growth into early 2022. So far, however, this weakness hasnāt spilled over into the countryās banking sector or the broader Chinese economy, he noted, which is a fairly encouraging sign. āRight now, Chinaās property-sector issues look relatively contained, but they do pose a risk to the global economic outlook, and will have to be carefully monitored,ā Eitelman remarked.
U.S. inflation outlook: What do the September readings suggest?
Turning to inflation, Eitelman noted that U.S. core inflationāas measured by the Labor Departmentās core consumer price index (CPI)ārose by 4.0% in September on a year-over-year basis, matching Augustās gains. āOverall, the U.S. actually saw very little sequential inflation increases during September, with core inflation a bit softer in general,ā he said, characterizing the latest data as mildly encouraging. While Eitelman remains of the view that recent inflationary pressures will ultimately prove to be transitory, he cautioned that the situation is far from resolved. For instance, so-called shelter inflationāwhich measures home prices and rent pricesāticked up last month, Eitelman said. āShelter costs tend to be one of the stickier and more cyclical drivers of U.S. inflation,ā he explained.
Ultimately, concerns around medium-term inflation risks remain front-and-center, Eitelman said, especially amid the much-publicized supply-chain bottlenecks. āOur view, from a baseline perspective, is that as the calendar turns to 2022, many of these intense supply-chain issues will begin to resolve themselves, allowing inflation to step down close toāor even a bit belowāthe U.S. Federalās Reserve preferred 2% target,ā he concluded.
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