Wednesday, May 29, 2019

1Q Corporate Results: 3% Earnings Growth Expected In 2019

Summary: Overall, corporate results in the first quarter of 2019 were good, but not great. Sales and earnings growth were 6% and 8%, respectively. Margins rebounded from the end of 2018 but are still below the cycle high made in 3Q18.

Looking ahead, analysts' expectations for 10% earnings growth in 2019 have been revised down to 3%. This estimate will be about right if margins can be maintained at the their 1Q19 level, but if the dollar continues to appreciate, earnings growth could be close to zero and another drop in oil prices could cause earnings to decline.

Valuations are now back to their 25-year average. They are not cheap, but if investors once again become ebullient, there is room for valuations to expand. With earnings growth likely to be negligible, the key for share price appreciation in 2019 is likely to hinge almost entirely on valuations expanding.

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96% of the companies in the S&P 500 have released their first quarter (1Q19) financial reports. The headline numbers were good, but not great. Here are the details:


Sales

Quarterly sales grew 6% over the past year. On a trailing 12-month basis (TTM), sales were 8% higher yoy, a strong result (all financial data in this post is from S&P). Enlarge any image by clicking on it.



The arrows in the chart above and those that follow indicate the period from 2Q14 to 1Q16 when oil prices fell 70%. The negative affect on overall S&P sales (above) and the energy sector alone (below) is easy to spot.



The six sectors with the highest weighting in the S&P grew an average of 9% in the past year (box in middle column) and, since the peak in oil in 2Q14, their sales have grown an average of 36%. In contrast, energy sector sales have declined 37% (far right column).



Excluding the volatile energy sector, sales for the remainder of the S&P have continued to trend higher at about the same rate over the past 8 years (blue line; from Yardeni).



The dollar has become a headwind for sales growth: in the past year (thru 1Q19), the dollar appreciated by 8%; this accounts for about a 4 percentage point decline in growth in corporate sales growth. For the current quarter (2Q19), the dollar is pacing 6% yoy appreciation.

How does the dollar impact sales growth? Companies in the S&P derive about half of their sales from outside of the US. When the dollar rises in value, the value of sales earned abroad (in foreign currency) falls. If foreign sales grow 5% but the dollar gains 5% against other currencies, then sales growth will be zero in dollar terms. The chart below compares changes in the dollar (blue line; inverted) with growth in S&P sales (red line): a higher dollar corresponds with lower sales (from Yardeni).



Earnings and Margins

Operating EPS grew 5% over the past year on a quarterly-basis and 16% on a trailing 12-month basis (TTM). GAAP EPS was better: 8% quarterly growth yoy and 17% growth TTM. More on these differences below.



Importantly, EPS has fallen from its recent all-time high in 3Q18, the first substantial fall since the "profit recession" in 2015.

The arrows in the next chart again indicate the period when oil prices fell 70% between 2014 and 2016. The improvement in total EPS since then comes with energy sector EPS at one-third of its level in mid-2014.



Likewise, overall S&P profit margins peaked at 10.1% in early 2014, fell to 8% at the end of 2015 and have since rebounded to 11.3% in 1Q19, an improvement from 10.1% in 4Q18 but well below the high of 12.1% in 3Q18.



Excluding the energy sector, margins rebounded to 11.9% in 1Q19, but may have peaked at 12.6% in 3Q18.



Most of the largest sectors have increased their margins 1-2 percentage points in the past 2 years but their margin peak, so far, was last year. 



The fall in margins is most apparent in the important technology sector, where margins shot up from 15% in 2016 to 23% in 2018 but have since fallen back to 20%. This is weighing on overall margins for the S&P.



Misconceptions and Bad Memes

There are some popular misconceptions that are regularly cited with respect to corporate earnings.

First, companies have been accused of inflating their financial reports through a net reduction in shares through, for example, corporate buybacks. In reality, however, 90% of the growth in earnings in the S&P over the past 9 years has come from better profits, not a net reduction in shares. Better profits have driven growth, not "financial engineering."



That has been true over the past 17 years, during which the net change in corporate shares has accounted for just 4% of EPS growth (from JPM).



In fact, despite record buybacks, the difference between EPS and profits has been consistently narrow.



Second, equity prices are said to have far outpaced earnings during this bull market. In fact, better profits accounts for about 75% of the appreciation in the S&P over the past 9 years. Of course valuations have also risen - that is a feature of every bull market, as investors transition from pessimism to optimism - but this has been a much smaller contributor.  In comparison, 75% of the gain in the S&P between 1982-2000 was derived from a valuation increase (that data from Barry Ritholtz).



Over the past 2 years (since 1Q17), during which time the S&P has risen about 20%, earnings have risen 34%, i.e., faster than the S&P index itself thereby accounting for more than 100% of price appreciation. The same is true over the past 1 year (from JPM).



Third, financial reports based on "operating earnings" are said to be fake. This complaint has been a feature of every bull market since at least the 1990s. In truth, the trend in GAAP earnings (red line) is the same as "operating earnings" (blue line).



It's accurate to say that operating earnings somewhat overstate and smooth profits compared earnings based on GAAP, but that is not new. In fact, the difference between operating and GAAP earnings in the past 27 years has been a median of 10% and the recent history has been no different (it was 9% in the most recent quarter). Operating earnings overstated profits by much more in the 1990s and earlier in the current bull market. The biggest differences have always been during bear markets.



Outlook for 2019

Looking ahead, expectations for 10% earnings growth in 2019 have already been revised down to 3%. Sales growth is expected to be 5% in both 2019 and in 2020 (from FactSet).

There are 5 considerations with a strong bearing on forward sales and earnings. Most of these appear likely to be a headwind in 2019.

First, as a baseline, it is reasonable to assume that corporate (non-energy) sales growth will be largely similar to the nominal economic growth rate of 4-5%, excluding currency effects. Right now, this seems achievable (from the OECD).



Second, the dollar weakened from the end of 2016 to early-2018 (a tailwind to growth) but has since appreciated 9%. That means that currency effects are now a headwind to growth. With half of corporate sales coming from abroad, even a small 4% appreciation in the dollar could cut 2 percentage points off sales growth this year.



Third, the price of oil was tracking more than a 30% yoy gain until October; the price then fell 30% into year end. In 1Q19, the average price of oil was 15% lower than a year earlier; in other words, the energy sector became a headwind to overall sales and EPS growth. Oil has since recovered but it needs to hold those gains; below $65, oil will remain a headwind in 2019.



As we have seen, the direct impact of oil prices on the energy sector is far more important than any ancillary affects on other sectors. As an example, consider this: the price of oil fell from over $100 to under $50 between mid-2013 and mid-2016 but non-energy sector operating margins were 10% in both instances. In short, lower oil prices are a net negative for sales and earnings.

Fourth, corporate tax cuts were a major tailwind to earnings in 2018. Analysts estimate that these likely added 10 percentage points to growth, meaning baseline growth of 5% could have jumped to 15% by virtue of tax cuts alone.

But the tax cut was a one-off adjustment, applicable only to 2018, and there is not much reason to expect it to permanently raise growth rates. Why? US corporations are not capital constrained; they have abundant cash and access to low cost debt and equity. Moreover, corporations have been making fixed capital investments. Over the past 3 decades, rising corporate profitability (blue line) has had no positive affect on new investments (red line; from the FT).



Fifth: the biggest risk to earnings in 2019 is margin contraction. For earnings to grow as fast as sales, margins have to be maintained. But after trending higher over the past 7 years, margins jumped 140bp in 2018. This was a massive rise and sustaining that level (let alone expanding margins further) seems unlikely, especially given the fall in margins over the past 2 quarters.




In fact, average margins in 2018 were 11.3%, the same as in 1Q19. If that level is maintained throughout 2019, earnings growth will be 5% (down from 22% in 2018). If the dollar continues to appreciate, that growth could fall to 3%. If oil remains under $65/barrel, earnings will fall further.


Valuation

At the end of 2018, the combination of 22% earnings growth and a 6% fall in equity prices left valuations at 14.4x, the same level as in 2010 and well below their 25-year average.  The rally since then has brought valuations right back to the average (from JPM).



Valuations are not cheap, but if investors once again become ebullient, there is room for valuations to expand. Why? When investors become bullish (blue line), valuations rise (red line). Investors had been pessimistic in early 2016 and then became far too optimistic at the market peak in January 2018. Importantly, that was greatly reset by the end of December 2018 and while sentiment has since rebounded, it has not reached an extreme (from Yardeni).



It's hard to believe that investors have already reached peak bullishness. Fund flows into equity mutual funds and ETFs was strong before both the 2000-02 and 2007-09 bear markets, and even before the 2015-16 mini-bear market (blue circles). In comparison, fund flows have been negative for 4 of the past 6 quarters (red circle; from JPM).



Valuations are influenced by more than investor psychology. Part of the reason equities have become more expensive over time is rising corporate profitability. Margins have reached successive new highs with each economic cycle over the past 3 decades: they are now more 100bp higher than in 2007, and that peak was more than 100bp higher than in 2000. Higher profitability (and growth) is typically rewarded with higher valuation multiples (from JPM).



While it is objectively impossible to know when or at what level margins will peak for this cycle, it's a reasonable guess that the cycle peak was in 3Q18.

Importantly, valuations have almost no bearing on the market's 1-year forward return (left side). But over the longer term, current valuations suggest that single digit annual returns are odds-on (right side; from JP Morgan).



In summary, corporate results in the first quarter were good, but not great. Sales and earnings growth were 6% and 8%, respectively. Margins rebounded from the end of 2018 but are still below the cycle high made in 3Q18.

Looking ahead, analysts' expectations for 10% earnings growth in 2019 have been revised down to 3%. This estimate will be about right if margins can be maintained at the their 1Q19 level, but if the dollar continues to appreciate, earnings growth could be close to zero and another drop in oil prices could cause earnings to decline.

Valuations are now back to their 25-year average. If investors once again become ebullient, there is room for valuations to expand. With earnings growth likely to be negligible, the key for share price appreciation in 2019 is likely to hinge almost entirely on valuations expanding.



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