You must subscribe to access archives older
than one year.
Take a free trial of Briefing In Play® now.
Subscribe Here
TERMS OF USE

The Briefing.com RSS (really simple syndication) service is a method by which we offer story headline feeds in XML format to readers of the Briefing.com web site who use RSS aggregators. By using Briefing.com’s RSS service you agree to be bound by these Terms of Use. If you do not agree to the terms and conditions contained in these Terms of Use, we do not consent to provide you with an RSS feed and you should not make use of Briefing.com’s RSS service. The use of the RSS service is also subject to the terms and conditions of the Briefing.com Reader Agreement which governs the use of Briefing.com's entire web site (www.briefing.com) including all information services. These Terms of Use and the Briefing.com Reader Agreement may be changed by Briefing.com at any time without notice.

Use of RSS Feeds:
The Briefing.com RSS service is provided free of charge for use by individuals, as long as the feeds are used for such individual’s personal, non-commercial use. Any other uses, including without limitation the incorporation of advertising into or the placement of advertising associated with or targeted towards the RSS Content, are strictly prohibited. You are required to use the RSS feeds as provided by Briefing.com and you may not edit or modify the text, content or links supplied by Briefing.com. To acquire more extensive licensing rights to Briefing.com content please review this page.

Link to Content Pages:
The RSS service may be used only with those platforms from which a functional link is made available that, when accessed, takes the viewer directly to the display of the full article on the Briefing.com web site. You may not display the RSS content in a manner that does not permit successful linking to, redirection to or delivery of the applicable Briefing.com web site page. You may not insert any intermediate page, “splash” page or any other content between the RSS link and the applicable Briefing.com web site page.

Ownership/Attribution:
Briefing.com retains all ownership and other rights in the RSS content, and any and all Briefing.com logos and trademarks used in connection with the RSS service. You are required to provide appropriate attribution to the Briefing.com web site in connection with your use of the RSS feeds. If you provide this attribution using a graphic we require you to use the Briefing.com web site logo that we have incorporated into the Briefing.com RSS feed.

Right to Discontinue Feeds:
Briefing.com reserves the right to discontinue providing any or all of the RSS feeds at any time and to require you to cease displaying, distributing or otherwise using any or all of the RSS feeds for any reason including, without limitation, your violation of any provision of these Terms of Use or the terms and conditions of the Briefing.com Reader Agreement. Briefing.com assumes no liability for any of your activities in connection with the RSS feeds or for your use of the RSS feeds in connection with your web site.

Briefing.com
Subscribers Log In
 
  • HOME
  • OUR VIEW
    • Page One
    • The Big Picture
    • Ahead of the Curve
  • ANALYSIS
    • Premium Analysis
    • Story Stocks
  • MARKETS
    • Stock Market Update
    • Bond Market Update
    • Market Internals
    • After Hours Report
    • Weekly Wrap
  • CALENDARS
    • Upgrades/Downgrades
    • Economic
    • Stock Splits
    • IPO
    • Earnings
    • Conference Calls
    • Earnings Guidance
  • EMAILS
    • Edit My Profile
  • LEARNING CENTER
    • About Briefing.com
    • Ask An Analyst
    • Analysis
    • General Concepts
    • Strategies
    • Resources
    • Video
  • COMMUNITY
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • YouTube
    • RSS
  • SEARCH
Login | Archive | EmailEmail |
HOME > Our View >The Big Picture >Plenty of Room for Earnings...
The Big Picture Archive
Last Update: 29-Aug-11 09:31 ET
Plenty of Room for Earnings Estimates to Come Down

Analyst estimates are for double-digit strong earnings growth over the year ahead. That level of growth is unlikely to happen. The risk to the market of lowered earnings forecasts is low, however, because the market is already pricing in an earnings collapse. Any increase in earnings will produce an increase in stock values similar to what has happened over the past year.

The Facts

Aggregate earnings for the S&P 500 for the year through the second quarter are $90.89, according to Standard and Poor's.

The S&P 500 index closed at 1177 on Friday, August 26.

That puts the earnings yield (earning/price) on the S&P 500 at a very alluring 7.7%. In a bow to convention, we will note that yield is equivalent to a trailing twelve-month price/earnings (P/E) ratio of just 12.9.

The year-ahead earnings estimate from analysts surveyed by Standard and Poor's is for an earnings increase of 16%.

The year-ahead earnings yield is 9.0% based on the above estimates, which equates to an 11.1 P/E.

Current Values Are Compelling

The earnings yield on the S&P 500 is extraordinarily large relative to current interest rates.

The solid 7.7% earnings yield compares to a meager 2.2% yield on 10-year U.S. Treasuries.

This spread of 550 basis points for a stock premium is highly unusual. Normally, stocks might have a slightly higher yield than bonds, but it is typically closer to 1%.

The high yield on stocks (low P/E) is due to fears that earnings will decline sharply due to a global recession, or another global credit crisis, this time sparked by problems in European banks.

Neither of these possibilities can be totally discounted. Nevertheless, the fears are extreme.

In a typical recession, earnings might be expected to decline 20%, perhaps even 30%. Yet, even if earnings were to decline a whopping 30% in the year ahead, the earnings yield on stocks would drop to only 5.4%. That equates to a P/E of 18.5.

That is a slightly low yield (high P/E) by historical standards, but would still be a high yield relative to the overall interest rate level (which is likely to prevail, particularly if the economy is weak enough to produce a decline in earnings).

In other words, the stock market is already priced for a recession that would drive earnings down as much as 30%.

A Cushion for Bad News

This creates a situation in which there is plenty of room for lowered earnings forecasts without much market impact.

The other day, a journalist on a major financial station asked an analyst about the low P/E and whether a decline in earnings would be necessary to push the market lower.

The analyst got the question wrong, and said that earnings estimates are too high and have to come down. His implication was that this would be enough to cause a decline for the stock market.

This is highly questionable. There is plenty of room for earnings forecasts to come down without causing a stock market decline. In fact, unless the earnings yield rises (P/E falls), any increase in earnings in the year ahead, regardless of what is now forecast, will produce an increase in the S&P 500 index.

It is the actual change in earnings, not the change in earnings forecasts, that will drive the stock market. The purported earnings expectations simply are not priced into current stock prices.

The Math

If earnings rise the forecasted 16% over the coming four quarters, and the earnings yield stays unchanged at 7.7% (or the P/E at 12.9), the S&P 500 will rise 16%. (This is tautological -- if the E goes up 16% and the P/E is unchanged, the P also has to be up 16%).

Similarly, if earnings rise even 5% and the S&P 500 P/E remains at a low 12.9, the S&P 500 index will rise 5%.

Any forecast of a decline in the S&P 500 index for the year ahead has to assume either a decline in earnings, or a sharp increase in the earnings yield (significant decline in the P/E).

For example, a forecast of a 10% drop in the S&P 500 index could occur with a 10% decline in earnings and a stable P/E of 12.9.

If earnings are simply flat, however, then a 10% decline in the S&P 500 would require a jump in the earnings yield to 8.5% (a drop in the P/E to 11.7).

Fear

There is tremendous fear incorporated into stock prices.

This fear goes beyond the reasonable expectation that U.S. economic growth will remain moderate for several more years, and that European economic growth will be stagnant.

The fear is based on the 2008 experience. Stock prices are depressed because of concerns that another credit market crisis will hit, or that Western democracies will enter an economic depression because of an inability to come to grips with their government imbalances.

If the U.S. economy continues to grow at even a moderate pace the next several years, earnings will rise. Earnings growth will be limited in part by likely lower margins and modest revenue growth. Earnings growth will be supported, however, by international exposure and modest nominal GDP growth in the U.S.

Given the low current valuations, the S&P 500 index can rise in line with any earnings growth; and over time, rise to a greater extent as fears subside and the earnings yield declines to a more normal relationship with interest rates (the P/E rises over time given continued low interest rates).

What It All Means

Third quarter earnings will start coming out in October. Before then, earnings estimates are likely to start coming down.

Those lower earnings estimates, however, will cause at most a temporary problem for the stock market.

Current estimates are for third quarter earnings growth of about 16% compared to the third quarter of 2010.

Even if those estimates are slashed to 10%, the reality of the strong underlying earnings growth will eventually overwhelm the concern over lowered estimates. This is because the market simply is not priced for the current earnings forecasts from analysts. The market is priced for far worse numbers, not the reported estimates.

If the U.S. economy manages to avoid a double-dip recession, and Europe muddles through its debt problems without precipitating a crisis for financial institutions in the U.S., continued earnings growth will lift the U.S. stock market over the years ahead.

In fact, if normalcy returns to the stock market in several years and fears subside, the P/E will expand from its current depressed level. That will provide significant upside to the market.

It all comes down to the low probability of a very high risk development such as a depression or credit crisis occurs, or whether there is a return to normalcy over the next several years.

Right now the market is pricing in a surprisingly high likelihood of the worst-case scenario. That provides considerable cushion for events such as lowered earnings forecasts, and long-term opportunity for portfolios willing to accept risk.

The S&P 500 is up 12.6% from this point last year.

It has been a choppy market and the bad news and fears have persisted virtually non-stop. U.S. economic growth is anemic. European banks and governments have serious debt issues.

This bad news and pervasive negativism are likely to continue.

The only good news seems to be the continued rise in earnings, the improvement in corporate balance sheets, and dividend increases. In the end, however, that is what will drive stock values.

An increase in earnings in the year ahead, even if below current forecasts, will produce another rise in the stock market, despite the continued obsession with the undeniably discouraging economic and political news.

--Dick Green, Briefing.com

Analyst estimates are for double-digit strong earnings growth over the year ahead. That level of growth is unlikely to happen. The risk to the
 
Add this to my Page Alerts.
MARKET PLACE
SPONSORED LINKS
 
  Follow Us On Linkedin  
 
 
LOGIN

CONTACT US
Support
Sitemap
OUR SERVICES

EMAILS & NEWSLETTERS
INSTITUTIONAL SALES

ADVERTISING

CONTENT LICENSING
ABOUT US
Our Experts
Management Team

COMMUNITY
MEDIA
Events
News
Awards
PRIVACY STATEMENT
Reader Agreement
Policies
Disclaimer
Copyright © Briefing.com, Inc. All rights reserved.
Close
You must log in or register to access this area.
Virtual Url Page Popup