The Jerusalem Post

Pickup in profit growth could justify Wall Street rally

- • By CAROLINE VALETKEVIT­CH

NEW YORK (Reuters) – US companies are set to report their strongest profit growth in two years, which could go a long way toward justifying Wall Street’s record-breaking rally, say stock investors who anticipate many companies will top expectatio­ns.

Fresh from a yearlong decline in quarterly profits, companies in the benchmark S&P 500 are expected to report their bottom lines grew by 6.2% in the fourth quarter, the latest Thomson Reuters data shows, the strongest growth since a 7.0% increase in the same quarter of 2014.

By most measures, the last quarter was a solid one for the wider US economy. One key measure of health of the manufactur­ing sector, the Institute for Supply Management’s (ISM) monthly purchasing managers’ index, recently hit its highest level in two years, and the global economic outlook has improved as well.

Investors may see a larger-than-usual number of companies posting results that beat Wall Street’s estimates in the weeks ahead, some strategist­s say

At the same time, the number of fourth-quarter corporate outlooks above analysts’ expectatio­ns is at the most they have been in years.

As a result, some strategist­s say, investors may see a larger-than-usual number of companies posting results that beat Wall Street’s estimates in the weeks ahead.

“There’s actually some positive momentum here in the fourth quarter... Wouldn’t it be logical to assume that you’d also see that coming through in your corporate activity?” said RBC Capital Markets chief equity strategist Jonathan Golub, who thinks current profit estimates do not fully reflect the economic improvemen­t.

Results also will benefit from “easy comparison­s” with yearago numbers, said Richard Bernstein, chief executive and chief investment officer of Richard Bernstein Advisors in New York.

MOMENTUM FOR STOCKS

A substantia­l upside surprise to reported profits could provide more momentum for a stock market that has been on fire since the election of Donald Trump in November and dampen worries that stocks are due for a pullback.

The rally to record highs for all three US major stock indexes has pushed price-to-earnings multiples – a main valuation measure for equities – to their highest levels in a decade and well above historic norms.

The S&P 500 is trading at 17.1 times forward earnings, well above the long-term average of 15, Thomson Reuters data shows.

“It will move away some of the concerns that the market has moved too far, too fast,” said Bucky Hellwig, senior vice president of BB&T Wealth Management in Birmingham, Alabama.

“Beating the Street” is a game most investors are aware of. More than 60% of corporate profit reports top analysts’ estimates on average, even in down times. But data from RBC Capital Markets showed that percentage climbs to 70% or higher when the ISM index, which indicates growth when it rises above 50, reaches into the mid-50s, where it is now.

According to Thomson Reuters data, S&P 500 companies have given or updated earnings guidance that was better than analysts’ expectatio­ns 41 times so far for the fourth quarter, which is about 28% more than a year ago and the most since 2011.

Conversely, companies have given guidance below analysts’ expectatio­ns 83 times for the quarter, down by about 15% from a year ago. Companies typically guide below expectatio­ns in any given quarter.

While a good chunk of those 41 companies said they expected cost cuts, restructur­ing or layoffs to improve their bottom-line numbers, some cited an improvemen­t in conditions, a Reuters analysis of the outlooks showed.

For example, in November, the chief financial officer of railroad operator CSX, Frank Lonegro, said in a statement the company expects fourth-quarter earnings to be flat to slightly up, “as macroecono­mic headwinds impacting the company’s volume are moderating.”

One big worry would be if the dollar continues to strengthen, which would dampen sales of US multinatio­nals, strategist­s said. The US dollar index jumped 7.1% in the 2016 fourth quarter.

 ?? (Lucas Jackson/Reuters) ?? TRADERS WORK on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange last Friday. The number of fourth-quarter corporate outlooks above analysts’ expectatio­ns is at the most they have been in years.
(Lucas Jackson/Reuters) TRADERS WORK on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange last Friday. The number of fourth-quarter corporate outlooks above analysts’ expectatio­ns is at the most they have been in years.

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