Kuwait Times

Earnings boost for stocks may lose luster

-

NEW YORK: There is little doubt on Wall Street that US corporate profits are on track to rise at a healthy rate this year, with an overall estimate for growth of almost 20 percent. Less certain, however, is how investors should value those profits with price-toearnings estimates. The struggle to do so could lead to more stock market volatility.

The valuations issue has gained fresh prominence for market strategist­s amid a rise in interest rates and bond yields, along with concerns about inflation increasing.

Those factors, including a yield on the benchmark 10-year US Treasury note that is approachin­g 3 percent, has prompted investors to rethink how to price stocks, which have become more expensive as the nearly nine-year bull market has aged. Indeed, some investors are weighing whether equities deserve lower valuations.

“It’s a topic that’s got to be in the front of a lot of asset managers’ minds right now: What level is this market a really good buy again?,” said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at The Leuthold Group in Minneapoli­s. “We are going to get good earnings coming through,” Paulsen said. “The problem is we are going to lose the value on those earnings.”

A test for equity valuations could come with next Friday’s US employment report for February. Last month’s report revealed surprising wage gains that sparked concerns of inflation, in turn setting off a jump in yields and a drop in stocks. Stocks are commonly valued by comparing their price to their estimated profits over the next year, known as the price-to-earnings, or P/E, ratio.

“Interest rates set the discount for what you want to value companies at and in general with higher interest rates you are going to see lower P/Es as fair value,” said Rick Meckler, president of LibertyVie­w Capital Management in Jersey City, New Jersey. “You are going to be less willing to pay higher multiples on stocks where your discount rate continues to go up.”

Volatility

The P/E ratio on the benchmark S&P 500 index had climbed to 18.6 times by the end of January, the highest level in about 15 years, according to Thomson Reuters Datastream, as stocks climbed to all-time peaks.

That was just before the market plunged at the start of February, dropping 10 percent and confirming a correction, and in turn lowering the P/E ratio to 17 times earnings estimates. Valuations hovered around that level at the end of a turbulent week. The S&P 500 rose 0.5 percent on Friday, recovering some losses from Thursday, when U.S. President Donald Trump announced plans for tariffs on steel and aluminum, raising concern about higher prices and a trade war.—Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait