Business

Quarterly corporate earnings not expected to provide any lift to laggard stock market

Companies will begin reporting third-quarter earnings this week. Analysts expect better numbers but it’s unclear if they will boost the stock market.
Companies will begin reporting third-quarter earnings this week. Analysts expect better numbers but it’s unclear if they will boost the stock market. AP

In the stock market obsession over inflation and interest rates, investors may be asking themselves, “What about profits?” After all, the stock market is supposed to reflect corporate profit expectations, not solely some economic statistic.

Of course, those expectations are tied to inflation and interest rates. And that’s why the major stock market measures have been providing stomach-churning moves.

Investors shouldn’t expect much for the third-quarter earnings season kicking off this week. Expectations have fallen quite a bit in recent weeks, so much so that the aggregate reported earnings should be better than forecast. That’s not to say profits are strong.

Third-quarter corporate results are predicted to show the slowest earning growth of the COVID-19 pandemic business environment. The profit picture is helped considerably by earnings in the energy sector. Stock market favorites like Meta, Alphabet and Amazon have had their earnings estimates cut by securities analysts, contributing to the sour mood of the stock market.

FedEx rattled an already nervous market in September when the shipping company came up short of its profit prediction just three months after trumpeting a longer-term bullish outlook. That’s how fast fortunes change in an economy quickly suspicious of fast-rising borrowing costs.

There was similarly bitter news from Nike and semiconductor firm Micron during the preamble of earnings season. Nike tripped on the global supply chain getting straightened out. Inventories jumped 44%. That will be good news for Nike shoppers who will see discounted merchandise heading into the holidays. But that will be bad news for profit margins.

During its conference call with analysts two weeks ago, Micron tried to sound a note of optimism despite describing 2023 as a year of high economic uncertainty and low visibility. Micron makes memory and data storage chips for computers, smartphones and cars.

Heading into this earnings calendar, corporate bottom line growth is forecast to accelerate slightly during this quarter and into the first quarter of next year, according to FactSet. That optimism is likely to be tested as companies begin turning in their latest financial results and expectations for a few quarters to come.

Investors want to know how firms are wrestling with inflation, rising interest rates and building economic anxieties.

Tom Hudson is a financial journalist in Washington, D.C. He’s the chief content officer at WAMU public radio station.

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