Each week we read dozens of transcripts from earnings calls and presentations as part of our investment process. Below is a weekly post which contains some of the most important quotes about the economy and industry trends from those transcripts. Click here to receive these posts weekly via email.
Earnings season picked up its pace this week, and commentary was a bit stronger this week than last week. The first week of earnings is always filled with banks and most reported good results. Their performance is especially impressive given how difficult it is for financial services companies to operate in this low interest rate environment.
The election is also front of mind for many CEOs. Almost everyone expects that the end of the presidential race will lift a cloud of uncertainty over the economy. Whether or not the election will be a lasting catalyst though depends in large part on what the next President actually does. Either way, a new President will bring change, but perhaps one more than the other.
The Macro Outlook:
Segments of the economy are showing signs of life
âThe macroeconomic environment still has its challengesâŚHowever, certain segments of the economy are showing signs of life.â âUnion Pacific CEO Lance Fritz (Railroad)
The US consumer is generally pretty healthy
âUS consumer health is generally goodâŚcharge-offs have receded. Other commercial credit remains very strongâŚWe feel good about loan growth, the economy feels good.â âBank of America CEO Brian Moynihan (Bank)
Healthcare spending was strong in September
âonce September hit, the data showed quite a rebound from the summer months, and the rate of growth in September was actually faster than what we saw in the first quarter, which was the highest growth quarter year-over-year in terms of penetrationâŚ.So overall, Iâd say weâre now in a stable environment in hospital procedures.â âJohnson and Johnson CFO Dominic Caruso (Healthcare)
Banks were firing on all cylinders last quarter
âall of our businesses did really quite well this quarter. So, not to overuse the phrase, firing on all cylinders but it really was pretty consistent. â âJP Morgan CFO Marianne Lake (Bank)
Commercial bankers see demand for loans
âI guess from speaking with our commercial bankers across the region before coming on the call, they are feeling good about the demand thatâs out there. You know, as I mentioned before, our pipeline is very, very strong. Itâs in line with what weâve seen in prior quarters. I think there is a little bit of a pause and I expect there will be a pause this quarter, as we go through the election cycle and people digest what that means and with the change in administration.â âM&T Bank (Bank)
Capital markets activity is ready to pick back up
âSo the pipeline feels pretty good when you talk our M&A team. And the backlog sequentially was up, not downâŚI mentioned before thatâŚa meaningful portion of the yearâs IPO volume actually occurred in September. So it does feel like we are starting now again into a market where a lot of that activity that got pushed from the first quarter into the second quarter that that still exists.â âGoldman Sachs CFO Harvey Schwartz (Investment Bank)
The industrial economy is still weak but hasnât seen a leg down
âYes. Well, first of all, I think we have seen â while not the beginnings of growth on the industrial side, I think we havenât seen â we have not seen another leg down. In other words, we have seen some stability.â âDanaher CEO Tom Joyce (Conglomerate)
There are positive things happening in the energy sector
âThere is a lot of positive things happening in energy right now. Prices have been stable. Capital markets are improving. Asset sales remain very robust. Weâre getting a lot of pay downs on our criticized credits and of course this quarter our charge-offs where down as well.â âComerica CEO Ralph Babb (Bank)
There are a lot of people still on the sidelines
â people are being a lot more conservative than they have been in the past. Theyâre sitting on a lot of cash. Theyâre in a good financial position and as things begin to pick upâŚour customers will begin to invest more in the future as well as some of the new products and services.â âComerica CEO Ralph Babb (Bank)
âWeâve done studies to show that globally thereâs 50 plus trillion thatâs sitting in cashâŚdepending upon changes in interest rates and changes in equity volatility, a lot of that money can come into motion.â âBlackrock President Robert Kapito (Asset Management)
People expect that the end of the election will be a catalyst
âI saw report a couple of days ago that 60%, or slightly less, but about 60% of the market it is really, really anxious about the elections. And I suppose we quite understand that. And so I think when all this subsides, however it goes, it will be less uncertainty and less anxiety, I think that will in still a bit more confidence then people will be a little bit more willing to invest, and make acquisitions and borrow money.â âBB&T CEO Kelly King (Bank)
Either President is going to bring change, but maybe one more than the other
âI also think a new President which is undoubtedly going to happen, has a slight variation one way or the other. I wonât talk about which one I think does which, but one gets a little more uncertain and causes us to stand back a little bit and wait to see how things settle. The other one is a lot more of the same and probably, whether we like it or not, is something we can manage because itâs the devil we know.â âUS Bank CEO Richard Davis (Bank)
Investors are expecting a greater emphasis on fiscal policy
âAs monetary policy reaches its limits in many regions, expansionary fiscal policy particularly in the form of infrastructure investments will be necessary to ignite economic growth.â âBlackrock CEO Larry Fink (Asset Management)
Some sort of international tax reform is likely
âI can tell you that I visit in Washington often and speak with members of the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee and the tax staffs are busily working and working very collaboratively with U.S. multinationals on an appropriate tax reform package. We think there is more bipartisan support now than there has been in the pastâŚwe think that overall the climate for international tax reform post the election, quite frankly, is more positive than itâs been in the last year or so.â âJohnson and Johnson CFO Dominic Caruso (Healthcare)
International:
Currency is becoming a modest tailwind to growth
âfor the first time in quite a while currency was a modest tailwind to revenue growth.â âIBM CFO Martin Schroeter (Enterprise Tech)
Brexit could be an overhang for a while
âArticle 50 wonât be invoked until March of next year. That then starts to clock on a 2-year window. And I think itâs our own belief, based on a series of elections in Europe, the combination of France and Germany, that information is probably going to be more back-end loaded than front-end loaded.â âCitigroup CEO Mike Corbat (Bank)
The uncertainty alone is enough to weigh on the UKâs economy
âIn the UK itâs still just mostly suffering from uncertainty, I donât think the markets particularly weak, but uncertainty is never good for consumer confidence, which is the main driver of auto sales.â âGroup 1 Automotive CEO Earl Hesterberg (Auto Dealership)
The ECB may keep its asset purchases going for a while too
âRegarding non-standard monetary policy measures, we confirm that the monthly asset purchases of âŹ80 billion are intended to run until the end of March 2017, or beyond, if necessary, and in any case until the Governing Council sees a sustained adjustment in the path of inflation consistent with its inflation aim.â âECB President Mario Draghi (Central Bank)
The rapid shift to e-commerce in China is leading to inventory imbalances in traditional channels
âThereâs some pretty rapid channel shift from traditional channelsâŚthe speed and magnitude of it, I think, has hit China differently than what you would see in the U.S. or other countriesâŚIn the process of that, whatâs happened is, some inventories have piled up in, letâs say, traditional channels while the marketâs needs have been satisfied by e-commerce channels.â âAbbott CEO Miles White (Medical Device)
Financials:
Banks are not going to wait for rates to rise anymore to pursue growth
âWe are not relying on a significantly better economic environment or a substantial increase in interest rates. We have already begun to execute our plan and many of our larger initiatives have been completed or are well underway.â âComerica CEO Ralph Babb (Bank)
âBut if rates are flat, youâve seen us grow our core loans and our loan balances pretty strongly, pretty consistently across businesses. And while we may not be able to replicate 15% core loan growth forever, certainly we can continue to grow our loans.â âJP Morgan CFO Marianne Lake (Bank)
They are extending the duration of their balance sheets as they accept lower rates for longer
âwe donât have high hopes for a lot of rate increases, but we do expect or hope for one in December. And so if lower-for-longer continue to persist, weâll look for opportunities to continue to chop away at our asset sensitivity, while also remaining â also keeping that optionality if rates do rise.â âFirst Horizon CFO BJ Losch (Bank)
As the economy improves banksâ reputation should improve too
âwhen times are good banks are doing more positive things. People are healthier. The economy is moving more quickly. People want us and need us and we can say yes more often. When the world gets a little bit better, we can just say yes more often; weâre more popular and weâre more effective. When times are tough, actually we move on to defense and weâre there to protect people from things that could get them in harmâs way. Thatâs a less attractive position. People donât like to watch defensive games either, because itâs low-scoring. At the end of the day, at the very end, it really does matter. So I do think itâs a noble occupation. Iâm very proud of what we do and very proud of the people that do it across this country.â âUS Bank CEO Richard Davis (Bank)
Technology is significantly lowering the cost of banking
âI would emphasize this shift to self-serveâŚ18% of our deposit transactions are now completed through mobile devices, thatâs better for customers, itâs also better for our shareholders. Itâs one-tenth the cost of walking into a branchâ âBank of America CFO Paul Donofrio (Bank)
And opening new channels for white glove institutions
âLast week we launched a new online personal loan platform Marcus by Goldman Sachs. Marcusâ goal is to enter the consumer credit market and provide a product that is simple, transparent, flexible and provides consumers with real value.â âGoldman Sachs CFO Harvey Schwartz (Investment Bank)
Schwab now has $10B in its robo advisor
âClient assets enrolled in Intelligent Portfolios surpassed the $10 billion mark at month-end September, just 19 months after launching in March 2015.â âSchwab CEO Walt Bettinger (Brokerage)
DOL rules are going to have a material impact on the asset management industry
âRegulatory changes have a material impact on the retail ecosystemâŚWe are likely to see a historical shift on how assets are being managed and investedâŚwe do believe, as it moves more towards managed portfolios, utilizing more of the centralization of models and corporate and asset allocation, itâs going to move quite a bit of money more towards passive strategies, utilization of ETFs. We do believe itâll systematically move assets away from activeâ âBlackrock CEO Larry Fink (Asset Management)
Active managers are not prepared to win the race to zero fees
âI think most active managers are not prepared or equipped to win the race to zero, and fees are going to go to zero in many passive strategies and weâre not equipped and weâre not interested in competing in that business.â âCohen & Steers CEO Robert Steers (Real Estate Asset Management)
Consumer:
Reed Hastings is ok with you using your parentsâ Netflix login
âNo plans on making any changes there. Password sharing is something you have to learn to live with because thereâs so much legitimate password sharing, like with sharing with your spouse, with your kids.â âNetflix CEO Reed Hastings (SVOD)
Technology:
Technology prices could start to rise
âa lot of discussions that Iâve had with the channel recently have been fairly positive around PC ASP increases next year. And part of this is the mix towards enterprise as consumer mix down. But others are pointing to sort of an inflection in ultrabooks, thin and light. So letâs say we got a massive ASP increase in laptops, like theyâre up 10% or something like thatâŚâ âAnalyst on Intel Call
Verizon sounds like it wants out of its Yahoo deal
âSo on yahooâŚWe are still evaluating what it means for this transaction. This was an extremely large breach that has received a lot of attention from a lot of different people. So we have to assume they will have a material impact on Yahoo. Lawyers had their first call yesterday with Yahoo to provide us information but as I understand thatâs going to be a long process.â âVerizon CFO Fran Shammo (Telecom)
Healthcare:
Medicaid has been ACAâs biggest success
âMedicaid has been a very significant success of the ACA and wherever that has played out, those markets have actually been more stable and better performing.â âUnitedHealth Group CEO Stephen Hemsley (Health Insurance)
Industrials:
Auto OEMs are cutting back production as dealer inventories are too high
âOEMs have now reacted and reduced production. It is true that weâre still very sensitive to our inventory levels and theyâre still not quite where weâd like them to beâŚBut they are coming into line and I think youâve probably read about many of the production cuts that the OEMs are making. So I think the entire industry understood the problem, and weâre working together to get it back in lineâ âGroup 1 Automotive CEO Earl Hesterberg (Auto Dealership)
And theyâre getting a little less aggressive with leasing
âwith used car values likely having peak sometime in the past, my impression is the OEMs are starting to become a little more prudent about how aggressive they get in pushing higher levels of leasingâ âGroup 1 Automotive CEO Earl Hesterberg (Auto Dealership)
Auto sales probably wont be able to sustain this level
âlight vehicle sales are forecasted to finish 2016 at 17.4 million, down less than 0.5% from the 2015 record rate of 17.5 millionâŚWe remain cautious with respect to auto sales sustaining at these levels.â âUnion Pacific CEO Lance Fritz (Railroad)
Materials, Energy:
Animal spirits are still alive in the oil industry
âOur customersâ animal spirits remain alive and well in North America even though for some they may feel caged in a bit by cash flow constraints in the short-term. The average U.S. rig count increased 14% over the quarterâ âHalliburton CEO Dave Lesar (Oil Service)
Credit quality of energy loans is improving. There may even be some reserve releases
âBarring any dramatic changes in energy prices, we believe the majority of the energy-related credit pressures weâve experienced in 2016 have largely subsided.â âPNC CFO Robert Reilly (Bank)
âIf the environment remains broadly consistent with today, we would not expect further significant builds in the fourth quarter for energyâŚyou see further reserve releases for oil and gasâ âJP Morgan CFO Marianne Lake (Bank)
But US oil production is likely to be down again in 2017
âwe actually donât see a change in the trajectory of downward U.S. production. I would say at current levels, probably into second half of next year, maybe fourth quarterâ âCore Labs CEO Dave Demshur (Oil Service)
Productivity in the Bakken has declined significantly since 2014
âthe decline curve always wins and never sleepsâŚthe average productivity for Bakken producing well is down 26% since peaking in 2014.â âCore Labs CEO Dave Demshur (Oil Service)
Meanwhile new supply is needed just to outrun the decline curve
âworldwide crude oil supply and demand markets are close to balancing, and will balance by the end of 2016âŚthe net crude oil production decline curve is currently at approximately 3.3%âŚmeans that the planet will need to produce approximately 2.8 million new barrels by this date next year to maintain current worldwide production capacity.â âCore Labs CEO Dave Demshur (Oil Service)
Miscellaneous Nuggets of Wisdom:
Thereâs nothing wrong with selling
âI want to make sure itâs clear, though, for this industry, selling is not bad. Itâs not bad anywhere, as long as youâre selling to peopleâs needs and youâre making it clear what advantages you have to provide them at the time that they want them.â âUS Bank CEO Richard Davis (Bank)
Full transcripts can be found at www.seekingalpha.com