Business Day

Firms withdraw guidance

- Caroline Valetkevit­ch New York

Investors are desperate for clarity on US corporate profits as the coronaviru­s pandemic has forced them to lower expectatio­ns ahead of the first-quarter reporting period starting in mid-April.

Investors are desperate for clarity on US corporate profits as the coronaviru­s pandemic has forced them to lower expectatio­ns ahead of the first-quarter reporting period starting in mid-April.

US companies are increasing­ly withdrawin­g guidance while warning of the outbreak’s steep toll on operations.

Twitter last week pulled its first-quarter revenue outlook and forecast an operating loss, while Marriott Internatio­nal and FedEx have backed away from 2020 forecasts.

With the profit picture worsening, the US Congress approved a $2-trillion funding package and stocks began to rebound from weeks of selling that ended the longest US bull market. US cases have risen above 100,000, and the country now has the highest number of coronaviru­s cases.

“Nothing is normal right now, and even looking for opportunit­ies is kind of like throwing darts in the dark,” said Randy Frederick, vice-president of trading and derivative­s for Charles Schwab in Austin, Texas. Any glimpses of guidance from companies as they report will be key this earnings season.

“It’s hard to believe we’ll find out a lot more in April, but at least earnings season pushes the door open a crack into learning how companies view things,” JJ Kinahan, chief market strategist at TD Ameritrade in Chicago, said in a note on Friday. “One possibilit­y is some companies presenting separate guidance paths that account for best-case, middle-case, and worst-case pandemic scenarios.”

Earnings forecasts have fallen, with analysts now projecting a year-on-year decline of 2.9% for the first quarter, 7.1% in the second quarter and 0.5% in full-year 2020, according to IBES data from Refinitiv. They still estimate slight growth in the third and fourth quarters, based on Refinitiv data.

Consensus estimates like Refinitiv’s have not come down nearly as much as forecasts from some market strategist­s. One reason is that analysts reviewing individual companies tend to use corporate outlooks to derive their own estimates. On Friday, Jonathan Golub, chief US equity strategist at Credit Suisse Securities in New York, said: “Largely companies are saying, ‘Listen, I don’t know what’s going on. We’re pulling our guidance. You’re on your own.’”

As a result, analysts’ forecasts are understati­ng the earnings contractio­n, he said, estimating a 24.1% drop in aggregate 2020 operating earnings for the S&P 500 index. Last week, David Kostin, Goldman Sachs chief US equity strategist, cut his 2020 earnings per share view for the S&P 500 to suggest a 33% decline from 2019. It was Goldman’s third cut to its earnings per share view in a month. This is a complete turnaround from the start of the year, when many investors were hoping for an earnings rebound after 2019’s lacklustre growth.

Fears of a US recession have mounted for weeks as strict measures to contain the coronaviru­s have led to temporary business shutdowns and layoffs.

A record more than 3-million Americans filed unemployme­nt benefit claims last week.

US multinatio­nals, including Apple, warned of problems early in the outbreak, which was first detected in China and spread rapidly to countries such as South Korea, Italy and Iran. Without guidance, the number of companies that beat Wall Street analysts’ estimates is likely to be well below the 70%-80% of recent years, said Nick Raich, CEO of The Earnings Scout, an independen­t research firm.

“We’re going to get like 35% beating the Street if we don’t get preannounc­ements.”

Profit estimates are being cut for industries in which the affect is more obvious: airlines, energy, casinos, hotels and resort-type businesses, he said, but for many others, the damage is less clear. Retailers could be hit hard. Lululemon Athletica on Thursday said business slowed in the second week of March, but did not provide a full-year forecast.

Strategist­s noted that the uncertain profit outlook combined with the recent sharp selloff in stocks made it harder to assess price-to-earnings ratios. “It is silly to look at valuations now,” said Robert Phipps, director at Per Stirling Capital Management in Austin.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Turnaround: David Kostin, Goldman Sachs’s US equity strategist, has cut his 2020 earnings per share view for the third time in a month.
/Reuters Turnaround: David Kostin, Goldman Sachs’s US equity strategist, has cut his 2020 earnings per share view for the third time in a month.

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