Earnings Recession Imminent Heading Into Q1 Season

 | Apr 13, 2023 09:02AM ET

  • S&P 500 EPS growth for Q1 2023 is set to come in at -6.8%, the lowest rate in nearly 3 years

  • Themes from Q1 and for CY 2023: inflation, increasing interest rates, possibility of recession, banking crisis, softening employment

  • The LERI shows corporate uncertainty increasing to a 2-year high

  • First Republic and PacWest suggest bad news ahead on Q1 calls

  • Peak weeks for Q1 season from April 24 - May 12

  • This Friday, April 14, marks the unofficial kick-off of Q1 2023 earnings season, and early estimates are pointing to a second consecutive quarterly drop in year-over-year S&P 500 EPS growth, otherwise known as an earnings recession. Currently S&P 500 earnings are expected to fall 6.8%¹ YoY, the largest decline since the depths of COVID lockdowns in Q2 2020.

    After initially starting out with an expected decrease of 4.1%, the fourth quarter 2022 earnings season ended with an even steeper YoY EPS decline of -4.6%. Historically, the S&P 500 YoY earnings growth figure increases as the season gets underway and more companies report (and beat!) analyst expectations. Analysts tend to be more bullish on longer-term earnings expectations, three to four quarters out. However, as the current quarter approaches and companies release updated (and typically very conservative) guidance, they begin to draw estimates down. The sell side does this by such a large margin that the majority of companies are able to beat estimates, the 10-year average beat rate according to FactSet is 73%, and therefore the growth rate expands.

    What are analysts seeing that caused them to lower Q1 expectations from -0.3%¹ on December 31, to -6.8% today? Many of the same headwinds mentioned on earnings calls in the back half of 2022 will again be the focus of Q1 reports: stubbornly high inflation, higher interest rates, possibility of recession .. likely with the addition of a couple of new concerns: the possibility of more bank failures and the softening labor market.

    LERI Shows CEO Uncertainty Is at Its Highest Level Since Q1 2021/h2

    Not only do analysts look more uncertain about Q1 earnings season, but early signs show companies aren’t feeling that great either.

    The Late Earnings Report Index (LERI) tracks outlier earnings date changes among publicly traded companies with market capitalizations of $250M and higher. The LERI has a baseline reading of 100, anything above that indicates companies are feeling uncertain about their current and short-term prospects. A LERI reading under 100 suggests companies feel they have a pretty good crystal ball for the near-term.

    While we won’t officially calculate the Q1 2023 earnings season (reporting in Q2 2023) LERI until the big banks — JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM), Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC), Citigroup (NYSE:C) — report Friday, April 14, the current pre-peak LERI reading stands at 111, the highest reading in two years. As of April 12, there were 31 late outliers and 25 early outliers. Typically, the number of late outliers trends upwards as earnings season continues, indicating that the LERI is poised to get even worse from here as corporations are increasingly more worried heading into the second half of the year.

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