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Q4 S&P 500 EPS growth is expected to come in at 12.7%, the highest growth rate in three years.
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Large-cap outlier earnings dates this week include: LUV, KMB, PPG (WA:), CI, CB, and OTIS.
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Peak weeks for the Q4 season run from February 3 – 28.
The Q4 earnings season continued on a positive note after big banks and other financials struck a bullish tone in the first two weeks of reporting. Of the companies that have reported at this point, 80% have beaten analyst expectations by an average of 7.3%, pushing expected growth for the index to 12.7%. The percentage of companies beating on revenues is lower at 62% and they are only beating by an average of 0.7%, lower than the historical average. While it looks like companies have gotten very good at managing margins, investors are likely hoping for earnings that are supported by strong underlying revenues.
Mag 7 Take the Stage
Highly anticipated reports from the Magnificent 7 will be in focus over the next couple of weeks. Tesla (NASDAQ:), Microsoft (NASDAQ:) and Meta (NASDAQ:) are slated to report Wednesday, January 29 after-the-bell, followed by Apple (NASDAQ:) on Thursday, January 30. The following week, Google (NASDAQ:) is confirmed to report Tuesday, February 4, and Amazon (NASDAQ:) on Thursday, February 6. And as usual, Nvidia (NASDAQ:) will close things out when they report on February 26.
After putting up profit growth north of 35% from Q1 – Q3 2024, Q4 is expected to show a marked slowdown for these seven names. Even so, the blended EPS growth expectation of 21.7% for Q4 is nothing to sneeze at. In fact, if you remove these seven companies, S&P 500 growth for the quarter drops to 9.7%.
Just as Mag 7 growth looks to begin to slow, other sectors are coming back to life after a lackluster 2023 – 2024. The S&P 500 minus Mag 7 goes from a current expectation of sub-10% EPS growth in Q4 to an anticipated increase of nearly 15% in the back half of 2025. Lagging sectors such as Industrials and Materials are expected to pick up in the latter half of the year, partially due to easier YoY comps.
As noted above, expectations remain high for the Magnificent 7 this earnings season. We’ve seen what happens to big tech stocks when results don’t impress. For the Q3 2024 earnings season, despite beating expectations on the top and bottom line, Meta, Microsoft and Apple, saw their stocks fall when other quarterly metrics or soft guidance disappointed investors.
Source: Wall Street Horizon
Outlier Earnings Dates This Week
Academic research shows that when a company confirms a quarterly earnings date that is later than when they have historically reported, it’s typically a sign that the company will share bad news on their upcoming call while moving a release date earlier suggests the opposite.
This week, we get results from a number of large companies on major indexes that have pushed their Q4 2024 earnings dates outside of their historical norms. Six companies within the S&P 500 confirmed outlier earnings dates for this week, three of which are later than usual and therefore have negative DateBreaks Factors. Those names are Kimberly-Clark Corp (NYSE:), Southwest Airlines (NYSE:), and PPG Industries (NYSE:). The three names with positive DateBreak Factors are Otis Worldwide (NYSE:), Cigna Group (NYSE:) and Chubb Limited (NYSE:).
Southwest Airlines is set to report its Q4 2024 results on Thursday, January 30, a week later than expected. While they are still adhering to their Thursday reporting trend, they have pushed their report into the 5th week of the year (WOY), after reporting in the 4th WOY for the last two years. This will be the latest LUV has reported for Q4 in ten years.
A variety of factors could be at play in this later reporting date. Despite operational challenges in 2022 (there is literally a Wikipedia page dedicated to this failure, entitled “2022 Southwest Airlines scheduling crisis”) that led to several cancellations and unhappy customers, Southwest looks to have improved its services. Just last week they were named the second best airline in the US by the Wall Street Journal, after Delta.
A shake-up in IR or CFO leadership can often lead to outlier dates. Earlier this year Southwest announced their long-time CFO, Tammy Romo, will be retiring on April 1 after being with the company nearly 25 years. A successor has not yet been announced, but this will be the last quarterly report with Romo at the helm.
Airline results have generally been mixed this season. First, out the gate this season was Delta, kicking things off by handily beating sell-side estimates on the top and bottom line, and with CEO Ed Bastian telling CNBC that 2020 is expected to be the “best financial year in our history.” On the other hand, last week you had American Airlines (NASDAQ:) giving lower-than-expected guidance for Q1 2025. EPS for that company would now show a loss of 20 – 40 cents, vs. the $0.04 expected by sell-side analysts. On Thursday we’ll see what side Southwest joins.
Q4 Earnings Wave
With the Q4 season getting started a little later this year, the peak weeks are expected to fall between February 3 – 28, with each week expected to see over 1,200 reports. Currently, February 27 is predicted to be the most active day with 872 companies anticipated to report. Thus far, only 53% of companies have confirmed their earnings date (out of our universe of 11,000+ global names), so this is subject to change. The remaining dates are estimated based on historical reporting data.
Source: Wall Street Horizon