Big Tech Delivers Solid Results As Peak Earnings Season Gets Underway

 | Jan 31, 2022 09:30AM ET

Key Takeaways:

  • Q4 earnings reports turned a corner last week with impressive results from Big Tech names
  • EPS growth normalizes on a QoQ basis, the number of companies showing increases vs. decreases over the last quarter is nearly at 50/50
  • The Delayer/Advancer ratio improves to 0.7, the best reading in 10 years. ie: more companies are advancing earnings releases in a vote of confidence around results
  • Peak earnings season kicks off this week with 1,067 companies expected to report, all eyes on Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL), Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:FB), Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN), and more
  • Potential surprises this week: Boyd Gaming Company (NYSE:BYD)

Big Tech Earnings Deliver

Better-than-expected earnings were finally enough to flip markets into the green on Friday after a week that saw a lot of red. After kicking off with mixed results from banks and industrials, big tech names helped the Q4 season turn a corner. IBM (NYSE:IBM), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), and Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) all delivered stellar results last week, surpassing expectations on the top and bottom-line, while Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) only beat revenue estimates due to increased spending on new facilities and products, which ate into profits. IBM and Microsoft benefited from the increased adoption of the cloud.

Intel (despite missing and then trading downward after the report) reported continued strong demand for chips, but even after those stellar results, the broad-based sell-off continued. It was Apple that helped reverse that pattern after the bell on Thursday when they reported their quarterly revenue figure ever and gave investors hope that supply chain issues were improving.

A recent lineup of Q1 events for Apple gave us clues to expect strong results from the tech giant and positive commentary from management (see: Apple’s packed Q1 calendar could be signaling good news ahead). Next up on Apple’s calendar: Dividend announcement on Feb 7, Shareholder Meeting on March 4, Spring product event to be announced sometime soon for March/April.

Robust results from last week drove the blended growth rate for S&P 500 EPS to move up to 24.3%.* Revenue growth increased to 13.9%.* Despite the good news, a majority of companies are still mentioning higher costs as an impediment to growth, and S&P 500 expected growth for Q1 and Q2 remains in the single digits.

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*Data from FactSet

EPS Growth Normalizes on a QoQ Basis

The number of companies reporting better QoQ EPS results is falling, showing that outsized growth due to easy comparisons for certain quarters of 2020 and 2021 is subsiding.

On average, over the last four years, 55% of globally publicly traded companies* have seen their EPS increase QoQ. Increases in EPS typically outnumber decreases in any given quarter. The few exceptions in which this trend reversed were in Q1 and Q2 of 2019, and of course, in Q2 2020, in the midst of COVID lockdowns when 65% of companies reported a decrease in EPS from the prior quarter.

For Q1 (companies reporting Q4 2021 results), that breakdown has normalized, with 49% of companies showing a decrease in EPS from the prior quarter and 51% showing an increase.

*Based on our universe of 9,500 publicly traded equities