Arab Times

Investors to tune in for trade impact

Companies may delay capex plans

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NEW YORK, July 7, (RTRS): With the United States and China finally formalizin­g tit-for-tat import tariffs, Wall Street is gearing up to dissect US corporate earnings in the coming weeks for signs of a trade war impact and whether it will affect spending plans.

Investors worry the trade conflict with China, the United States’ largest trading partner, could make companies delay plans for capital expenditur­es, which jumped in the first quarter after the late December US tax overhaul that included massive tax cuts for corporatio­ns.

The United States and China slapped duties on $34 billion worth of each others’ imports on Friday, escalating their conflict and suggesting there was little sign the dispute will soon end.

Machinery, aerospace and other industrial names have been among the hardest hit. S&P 500 industrial­s have fallen more than 5 percent since March 1, when US President Donald Trump said he would impose steep tariffs on steel and aluminum, while the S&P 500 has risen more than 1 percent in that period.

Following the tax package approval, expectatio­ns were high that companies would ramp up not just buybacks and dividends but capital spending in 2018, said Quincy Krosby, chief market strategist at Prudential Financial in Newark, New Jersey.

“What we’re hearing from a number of CFOs is if the trade issue continues to dominate the headlines and create even more uncertaint­y, those plans may be on hold,” she said.

In the first quarter, year-over-year S&P 500 capital expenditur­e growth was the highest since 2011, according to S&P Dow Jones data.

Strategist­s at DataTrek Research in New York said in a recent note the “primary planning headache” for corporate managers in the second half of the year will come from uncertaint­y related to trade and tariffs.

“The major concern is the supply chain. So many little parts for almost everything are manufactur­ed in China, and there can be a real hold-up in manufactur­ing because of these tariffs ... It is all a balancing act,” said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment strategist at Inverness Counsel, in New York. “For every company hurt, there’s a company that’s being helped. So this isn’t negative for everyone by any means.”

Reporting on the second quarter kicks into gear next week, with results Friday from JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Citigroup. More than 200 S&P 500 reports are due the following two weeks, including from some US companies that could be caught in the middle of a US trade war with China.

They are expected to include results from Honeywell, Boeing, Whirlpool and Western Digital, while results from Caterpilla­r are due July 30.

Profit forecasts that include a potential tariff impact will perhaps even overshadow second-quarter earnings growth, which analysts say could equal or surpass the first-quarter’s 26.6 percent yearover-year increase. That was the biggest since the fourth quarter of 2010, according to Thomson Reuters data.

“That dominates the landscape at the moment. The impact isn’t going to be on earnings already made; it could though impact the accompanyi­ng guidance to the extent management offers any,” said Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott in

Philadelph­ia.

Though consumer discretion­ary shares have been among the best performers this year, UBS analysts said import tariffs could be a worry for the retail industry.

Harley Davidson drew attention in June when it warned of a financial toll from trade tensions, and the trade dispute in general has created uncertaint­y for investors struggling to value stocks at a time strong corporate profits might otherwise help carry the bull market through its 10th year.

Some investors say much of the negative news has already been priced into the market, suggesting stocks could gain as earnings are reported.

“The earnings season has the potential to draw more money into the market,” said Bucky Hellwig, senior vice-president at BB&T Wealth Management in Birmingham, Alabama.

Savings from the US tax overhaul are continuing to boost corporate bottom lines, he said.

The tariff impact has yet to show up in earnings forecasts, even though trade tensions were a worry heading into firstquart­er results as well.

Estimates for S&P 500 second-quarter profit growth actually have risen slightly since April, putting the latest forecast at around 20.7 percent, based on Thomson Reuters data. Given that the majority of companies typically beat analysts’ earnings expectatio­ns, that number is likely to rise.

But other risks to earnings are mounting as well, including rising interest rates and a strengthen­ing US dollar, which strategist­s say could be more of a problem in the second half of the year if it continues on the same path.

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