2 Small Cap Stocks To Watch As Corporate Earnings Continue

 | Aug 10, 2021 01:05AM ET

The following research was written with Christine Short , VP of Research at Wall Street Horizon.h2 Executive Summary and Corporate Earnings Outlook (week of August 9):/h2

  • Q2 earnings season is setting records in terms of EPS beat rates, but the future is uncertain regarding global regulatory risks and domestic infrastructure spending.
  • We profile a large cap Japanese firm facing operational challenges in the semiconductor market.
  • Two US-based small cap stocks with recent bouts of share price volatility are featured with unusual earnings dates.
h3 Earnings Outliers/h3

Two earnings outliers are highlighted this week. By using the Z-score, clients can gauge how statistically unusual a company’s earnings date is relative to normal. We analyze five years of earnings trends to develop a normal earnings date. Wall Street Horizon clients are alerted when a firm has an earnings date Z-score greater than 3.0.

First up is a company in a tough industry at the moment. Tokyo Electron Ltd (OTC:TOELY), (T:8035) is a $66 billion large cap Technology firm based in Tokyo and listed on the Nikkei 225 index. The stock also trades in the US on the OTC market under the ticker TOELY. Tokyo Electron (TEL) develops, manufactures, and sells semiconductor production equipment and industrial electronics for flat panel displays. While US-listed semiconductor stocks are inching to new highs, TEL has been trading sideways much of this year.

h2 Macro Issues Keeping A Lid On Growth/h2

The persistent global squeeze on the supply of semiconductors is impacting TEL’s business. Another major issue for the firm right now is the regulatory situation in China—a major customer area. Given China’s recent crackdown on several industries, including technology, TEL’s stock price has wavered with volatility in the region. Shares peaked in early Q2 near ¥50,000 and then fell to near ¥45,000. The stock is little changed from its January high as supply issues and regulatory hurdles appear to be weighing on near-term growth. Still, profits for the Japanese large cap have bounced back from 2020’s decline, but are still below 2019’s peak as of the most recent fiscal year-end last March.