3Q Financials Poor; 4Q Won't Be Better. What To Expect In 2016

 | Nov 11, 2015 12:12AM ET

Summary: 3Q financials have been predictably poor, with negative growth in both sales and EPS. Sales growth has been affected by a 50% fall in oil prices and 15% rise in the trade-weighted dollar. Both of those are likely to make upcoming 4Q financials look bad as well.

Of note is that overall profit margins expanded slightly, even with negative margins for energy stocks. Looking ahead to 2016, at $45-50, oil prices will no longer negatively affect sales and EPS growth. Year over year changes in the dollar may also become negligible starting in 2016.

In fact, the biggest wildcard is the dollar, which historically weakens after interest rates start rising. This would be a boon to the roughly 40% of S&P sales and profits that are derived from overseas.

A return to 4% growth is not an unreasonable expectation for 2016.

Especially for their rate of growth, S&P valuations are high. Even if sales and EPS growth start to pick up, valuations are likely to remain a considerable headwind to equity appreciation in 2016.

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About 88% of US corporates have reported their financial results for the 3rd quarter of 2015. What have we learned?

h3
Earnings: Large impact from oil price drop/h3

Using figures from FactSet, EPS growth in 3Q is tracking minus 2.2% (year over year); sales growth is tracking minus 3.5%. Both EPS and sales growth are poor.

By now it should be no surprise that the energy sector has been hard hit by falling oil prices. The average price of oil was nearly $100 in the 3Q of 2014; it fell 50% to an average of roughly $50 in 3Q of 2015.