Key Takeaways
- We expect another solid quarter of earnings growth, but a third straight double-digit increase for S&P 500 profits appears unlikely.
- Hurricane impacts, tougher comparisons, and a lack of contribution beyond technology and energy present earnings growth headwinds.
- Hurricane impacts aside, we have several reasons to be optimistic, including solid manufacturing data, recent U.S. dollar weakness, and resilient estimates.
Third quarter earnings season gets underway this week (October 9–13) and it should be another good one. The S&P 500 Index has exceeded earnings expectations 33 straight quarters and we see no reason why the third quarter won’t make it 34. However, as seen in Figure 1, earnings growth should fall short of the stellar results and double-digit pace of the past two quarters. We don’t like to lead with the negatives, but some of the reasons earnings growth may slow down this quarter include:
- Hurricane impacts. The most visible impact of the devastating hurricanes (Harvey and Irma) late in the third quarter can be seen in insurance company earnings estimates. The property casualty industry within the financials sector may have to absorb more than $100 billion in insured losses during the quarter, which is why financials earnings are expected to fall. Disruptions in other industries in the affected areas (Florida and Texas) such as retail and oil and gas production add to the challenge.
- Tougher comparisons. Earnings growth improved significantly from the second quarter of 2016 to the third quarter of 2016 [Figure 1]. In the second quarter of 2016, S&P 500 earnings fell 2.1% year over year, compared to the 4.3% year-over-year increase in the third quarter of 2016. That means the base from which to grow year over year was higher for the third quarter of 2017 than it was for the second quarter of 2017, making earnings growth tougher to come by this earnings season.
- Sharply lower energy growth. Energy sector earnings growth is expected to drop from 563% in the second quarter to 135% in the third, even as oil prices rose sharply during the third quarter. Tougher comparisons and hurricane impacts are driving the slowdown, although energy is still expected to be a major contributor to S&P 500 earnings growth in the quarter, along with technology [Figure 2].
- Little contribution outside of technology and energy. The expected year-over-year increase in S&P 500 earnings is essentially being driven by energy and technology, with only a minor contribution from healthcare. The lack of breadth of earnings gains, on top of the expected decline in financials earnings, will make anything better than a mid-single-digit overall earnings increase unlikely.
Cause For Optimism
With the negatives out of the way, let’s get to the good news?—?though mid-single-digit earnings growth is hardly bad. We have several reasons to be optimistic about earnings growth this quarter:
- Solid manufacturing activity. Strong manufacturing activity is supportive of corporate profits. The Institute for Supply Management Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) rose 2 percentage points to a solid 60.8 in September, which is the highest since 2004, while the New Orders component of the survey rose 4.3 percentage points to an even stronger 64.6 reading. Meanwhile, favorable economic and manufacturing conditions overseas are supportive of U.S. multinationals?—?virtually all PMIs globally are above 50.
- Estimates have held up well considering the impact of hurricanes. Consensus earnings estimates for the third quarter have held up well considering the reduction in estimates over the last three weeks of September, mostly in financials, due to hurricane-related losses. Estimates for the third quarter have dipped by about 3.7% over the past three months, slightly better than the long-term average reduction of just over 4%. Looking further out, estimates have held steady and point to earnings growth reacceleration, partly reflecting the potential for a corporate tax cut.
- Pre-announcements. The ratio of companies pre-announcing negative third quarter 2017 results relative to those pre-announcing positive results, at 1.6, is better than the year-ago quarter (1.9), last quarter (1.8), and the 20-year average (2.7), suggesting a high percentage of companies will exceed estimates again. The second quarter’s 73% earnings beat rate led to a 5% upside surprise.
- U.S. dollar pressures have abated. The average level of the U.S. Dollar Index during the third quarter of 2017 was 2.4% lower than in the third quarter of 2016, setting up a small tailwind to overseas earnings for U.S. multinationals. This is the first year-over-year decline in the index since the third quarter of 2016 and its biggest annual decline since mid-2014.
Conclusion
We expect a solid earnings season in the third quarter, especially considering the circumstances. Markets may have to find a way to unravel the impact of the hurricanes, but we believe that investors will appreciate the underlying earnings strength once all results are in. We see several signs that after the dip in earnings growth in the third quarter, corporate America may be poised for better growth at the end of the year and into 2018.
We believe that the earnings outlook is sufficient to support the stock market at current levels. Although we may see a pickup in volatility in the near term, our early take on 2018 S&P 500 earnings is supportive of gains for stocks next year. Tax reform, or tax cuts, may provide a boost. More to come in our 2018 Outlook due out in late November.