Disappointing Start To Earnings Season Sends Markets Into Tailspin

 | Jan 18, 2022 09:53AM ET

Banks Kick Off Q4 Reporting Season On The Wrong Foot

In 2021 all of us who watch quarterly earnings became accustomed to big beats from most S&P 500 companies, especially the banks, as they start each earnings season and had easier comparisons to 2020. That has changed this earnings season. Q4 kicked off with a whimper. 

In a stunning reversal from the last few years, Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) was the only big bank that beat on both the top and bottom-line and saw a pop in share prices, as the consumer bank benefitted from a pick up in consumer spending, higher fees, and increased lending in the second half of the year.

JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) and Citigroup (NYSE:C) had a different fate, however. JPMorgan beat on EPS (actual: $3.33 vs. estimate: $3.01*) but missed on the top-line (actual $29.25B vs. est: $29.78B*). Headwinds included higher expenses and a tightening labor market. Citigroup, on the other hand, surpassed revenue expectations (actual: $17.01B vs. est: $16.85B*) but missed bottom-line estimates (actual: $1.46 vs. est: $1.72*), also due to increased expenses and a decrease in revenues for their global consumer banking business. *All estimates provided by FactSet

We are still waiting on results from the remaining three big banks this week: Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) and Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) on Tuesday, and Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) on Wednesday.

Corporate Commentary Still Largely Focused On Inflation, Labor Shortages, And Supply Chain Disruptions

Only 26 S&P 500 companies have reported thus far, but many of the themes harped on in Q3 reports are making a comeback this quarter regardless of the sector. Increased expenses, labor shortages, and/or lingering supply-chain issues have been mentioned in 60% of press releases throughout the Consumer Staples sector (Hormel (NYSE:HRL), General Mills (NYSE:GIS), ConAgra Foods Inc (NYSE:CAG)); Industrials (FedEx (NYSE:FDX), Delta Apparel Inc (NYSE:DLA)); and Financials (JPMorgan, Citigroup). 

This paired with Wednesday’s CPI reading, which showed the highest YoY inflation increase in 40 years, and Tuesday’s JOLTs report revealed a record number of workers quit their jobs in November, both indicating it’s hard to hire/keep employees. Expect more of these comments as we get into the peak weeks later this month.

The Delayer/Advancer Ratio For Q1 Improves

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

We track whether companies report sooner, later, or in-line with their historical reporting date each earnings season. Academic research shows that bad news typically follows on the earnings call when a company delays earnings. Similarly, advancing an earnings date is highly correlated with the good news being shared on the quarterly call. We find the delayer/advancer ratio to be a good indicator of corporate health.

Looking at just US companies with a market cap greater than $250M, the delayer/advancer (D/A) ratio for Q4 earnings has dipped to 0.8 from last week’s 1.2, meaning slightly more companies are advancing earnings than delaying them. This is below the 10-year average of 1.1 and a good sign of what could be shared on upcoming earnings releases. However, it’s important to keep in mind that it is still very early in the season, and only about a third of companies have confirmed earnings dates at this juncture.

The chart below shows the D/A ratio for each of the last 10 years as well as for Q1 2022 and outlier counts (delayers and advancers) for each period.