Next Financial Shoe to Drop? KeyCorp Late Earnings Date Raises Concerns

 | Mar 20, 2023 01:52PM ET

  • Banking turmoil has cast aside the Fed and inflation as the key macro risk

  • With Q1 earnings just a few weeks away for many large and small Financials sector companies, volatility likely persists in the near term

  • We spotted one regional bank with a suspiciously late earnings date confirmation that warrants closer attention following the SIVB collapse

  • Did you have “systemic regional banking crisis” on your 2023 financial risks bingo card?

    What makes a market shock a true black swan is that few market participants see it coming. Everyone from Wall Street pros to families on Main Streets across America knew that inflation was a key concern in 2023. And every pundit was sure that the Fed’s actions could bring about volatility in both the equity and fixed-income markets this year. But the sudden failure of SVB Financial (SIVB) brought a crisis in confidence in the banking industry front and center.

    h2 Shifting Focus to Individual Companies/h2

    And there’s still so much uncertainty. With Signature Bank (NASDAQ:SBNY) Signature Bank being taken into survivorship by regulators and UBS Group (NYSE:UBS) poised to takeover Credit Suisse (NYSE:CS), it feels like 2008 all over again. Portfolio managers must aim to be a step ahead of risk – of course, that is easier said than done. But one strategy is to turn away from the macro for a moment and see what events could spark volatility at the asset-specific level.

    Wall Street Horizon tracks and reports on more than 40 corporate event types so that clients can pinpoint when volatility may spike at the company level. It’s by using these singular events that broad macro analysis can also be performed in a risk-focused way.

    h2 KeyCorp: Late Earnings Date Confirmation/h2

    One name that we are growing more concerned about is KeyCorp (NYSE:KEY). We will leave it to our clients to make their own decisions on where the stock could go, but this name is a red flag. Here’s why: KEY typically confirms its Q1 earnings date around February 7 with a standard deviation of about 20 days. As of March 20, the firm has yet to confirm its reporting date, making the delay about two standard deviations later than normal.

    Our research shows that firms with abnormally late earnings confirmation dates tend to report bad news, then underperform when they finally issue quarterly numbers. Will that be the case for KeyCorp? Hard to say, but with regional banking worries left and right, this is not a bullish look for the Cleveland-based $11 billion market cap Financials sector firm.

    • KEY 3-Year Stock Price History: Massive Plunge on Huge Volume