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Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Jeff Cox — Here's the one trend to watch in earnings season

The first-quarter earnings season looks to offer something the market hasn't seen in years. Subsequent quarters likely will have to keep up or it could be an ugly year for corporate America.
Total sales could top bottom-line profits, a turnaround that comes after corporations had spent quarter after quarter slashing costs through layoffs and other forms of austerity. At the same time, revenue lagged amid weak demand and a general lack of confidence.
So in some respects this could be what the market has been waiting for since the financial crisis and the accompanying recession—that point where consumers are willing to take the handoff and generate growth....
Corporations have utilized the Fed's zero-interest-rate policy to run up huge levels of cheap debt, which they then used to buy back shares of their own stock. More than $1 trillion of buybacks have reduced share counts and thus boosted earnings-per-share levels to record highs.
The question now is whether companies can begin to drive earnings organically once the Fed ends QE, which has sent the central bank's balance sheet to nearly $4.3 trillion.
If revenue doesn't grow, "the market will say these valuations are more and more based on QE," Krosby said. "The market is trying to find that equilibrium: What is fundamentals and what is QE? Top-line growth is really key. It's so important because it feeds into a spectrum of analysis that goes beyond just the typical company."
NetNet
Here's the one trend to watch in earnings season
Jeff Cox

Is the American consumer reviving?

2 comments:

  1. As removal of "monetary easing" will act to increase interest income to the non-govt, corporate sales/profits will then start to increase and then as there will be meaningful sales increases the firms will start to increase CAPEX and reduce the share count reductions with the retained earnings... rinse and repeat.

    Our monetarist morons running things have it all backwards...

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  2. But I believe the Fed has signaled that raising rates won't happen before 2015. Winding down QE isn't like to add much if anything. Could be that yield curve could steepen but that's not just a matter of QE.

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