Arab Times

Tech haves and have-nots face Q3 tests

Semiconduc­tors seen to post 27 pct profit dip

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NEW YORK, Oct 19, (RTRS): Technology companies, which make up the largest swath of the US stock market, are expected to post a nearly 8% drop in thirdquart­er profits as reports roll in next week from many of the sector’s biggest corporatio­ns.

But below the surface, the estimates reveal a wide range among the companies that comprise the S&P 500 informatio­n technology sector, which includes Apple Inc, Microsoft Corp as well as communicat­ions equipment, hardware and IT services companies.

The overall sector’s earnings performanc­e is being dragged down by semiconduc­tors, which are expected to post a nearly 27% plunge in quarterly profits, according to IBES data from Refinitiv, as analysts point to impact from the US-China tariff conflict and generally weak demand.

Growing business IT spending continues to support other pockets of tech, according to investors. Software firms are poised for a nearly 11% gain in profits from a year ago, according to the IBES data from Refinitiv.

“You may have two dynamics going on in tech in the opposite direction,” said John Augustine, chief investment officer at Huntington National Bank in Columbus, Ohio. “Can software live up to the numbers and will semis beat the numbers?”

Among software companies, Microsoft, the largest US company by market value, reports results on Wednesday, while earnings are also due next week from semiconduc­tor stalwarts Intel Corp and Texas Instrument­s Inc.

Other tech earnings next week include payment processors PayPal Holdings Inc and Visa Inc, with iPhone maker Apple, whose results ripple through its supply chain, expected to post a 2.7% drop in earnings when it reports the following week.

One of the early reporters, Internatio­nal Business Machines Corp, kicked off the season on a sour note on Wednesday, with quarterly revenue that missed estimates.

Even with the disparate forecasts for the third-quarter company results, tech stocks are outshining the market broadly in 2019.

The S&P 500 tech sector, which comprises over one-fifth of the benchmark index, has climbed more than 30% in 2019, compared to a 19% rise for the S&P 500.

Federal Reserve easing of interest rates has helped the performanc­e, which comes despite uncertaint­y about the health of the global economy and about US-China trade tensions.

Tech is “the primary growth engine of the economy,” said David Joy, chief market strategist at Ameriprise Financial in Boston.

“China is an issue for them, but at the same time they continue to grow and they continue to innovate,” Joy said. “You have to have exposure in technology. We just think as you look around at the market landscape, it’s one of the better places to be right now.”

The tech sector’s strength is broad-based, including gains so far this year of about 30% or more from the four biggest industry groups by market value within the tech sector: software, IT services, hardware, storage & peripheral­s and semiconduc­tors.

“The IT budget continues to garner more dollars from the general budget of Corporate America,” said Michael Seidenberg, portfolio manager for the global technology team at Allianz Global Investors. “There will be winners and losers within the sector, but I think generally speaking that is a trend that has persisted.”

Of US corporatio­ns, semiconduc­tor makers are seen as among the most affected by the US-China trade tensions, which have triggered big swings in their shares.

But the stocks still have prospered: the Philadelph­ia SE Semiconduc­tor Index has climbed nearly 40% this year to all-time highs, while three chip stocks – KLA Corp, Lam Research Corp, Advanced Micro Devices Inc – are the tech sector’s biggest 2019 gainers.

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