Big U.S. Stocks ’Q2’ 23 Fundamentals

 | Aug 11, 2023 04:14PM ET

The big US stocks dominating markets and investors’ portfolios have surged dramatically higher in recent months. That powerful run has fueled widespread greed and complacency, leaving universal bullishness in its wake. This just-finishing Q2’23 earnings season reveals whether leading US companies’ underlying fundamentals support such euphoric outlooks. These companies are thriving, but dangerously expensive.

The mighty flagship S&P 500 soared 19.0% between mid-March to late July. That thrust big US stocks back into formal bull-market territory, with that SPX powering up 28.3% at best above mid-October’s bear-market low. That left the US stock markets just 4.3% under early January 2022’s all-time record high. It’s no wonder euphoria reigns today after such an impressive performance, these stock markets are on fire.

Naturally, investors love chasing such strong upside momentum in the big US stocks, rushing to pile in. But after any outsized surge quickly catapults stock markets to seriously-overbought levels, caution is in order. In mid-July the SPX rocketed 12.9% above its baseline 200-day moving average, really-stretched levels technically. That portended a rebalancing selloff, and the S&P 500 is already down 2.6% August-to-date.

The core mission of investing is multiplying wealth by buying low and then later selling high. Opportunities for the former are long gone after such a strong run. That has left big US stocks trading at very-high prices relative to their underlying corporate earnings. Valuations are extreme, running deep into formal bubble territory. That makes buying in high today and hoping to sell even higher later to greater fools pretty risky.

The big US stocks’ new Q2’23 results highlight how incredibly expensive these leading companies have recently become. For 24 quarters in a row now, I’ve analyzed how the 25 largest US companies that dominate the SPX fared in their latest earnings seasons. These behemoths commanded a dumbfounding 45.3% of the SPX’s total market cap exiting Q2. Their latest-reported key results are detailed in this table.

Each big US company’s stock symbol is preceded by its ranking change within the S&P 500 over the past year since the end of Q2’22. These symbols are followed by their stocks’ Q2’23 quarter-end weightings in the SPX, along with their enormous market capitalizations then. Market caps’ year-over-year changes are shown, revealing how those stocks performed for investors independent of manipulative stock buybacks.

Those have been off the charts for years, fueled by the Fed’s previous zero-interest-rate policy and trillions of dollars of bond monetizations. Stock buybacks are deceptive financial engineering undertaken to artificially boost stock prices and earnings per share, maximizing executives’ huge compensation. Looking at market-cap changes rather than stock-price ones neutralizes some of stock buybacks’ distorting effects.

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Next comes each of these big US stocks’ quarterly revenues, hard earnings under generally accepted accounting principles, stock buybacks, trailing twelve-month price-to-earnings ratios, dividends paid, and operating cash flows generated in Q2’23 followed by their year-over-year changes. Fields are left blank if companies hadn’t reported that particular data as of mid-week, or if it doesn’t exist like negative P/E ratios.

Percentage changes are excluded if they aren’t meaningful, primarily when data shifted from positive to negative or vice-versa. These latest quarterly results are very important for American stock investors, including anyone with retirement accounts, to understand. They illuminate whether the US stock markets are fundamentally sound enough to continue powering higher in coming months, or whether a selloff is overdue.