S&P 500 Earnings Beginning To “Return To Normal”

 | Nov 14, 2021 11:28PM ET

Flew out to the East Coast Friday for dinner with a new client, and I remember thinking “Everyone’s nervous, and everything seems overvalued” and then the following thought was, “Well, should that make me bullish as a contrarian sentiment gauge?”

It’s a weird business, but the fact is so many people seem to be worried about a correction, and for good reason, and yet right there is the proverbial “wall of worry.”

An email went out to clients last week, looking at uncorrelated assets that have lagged badly for the last 12 – 15 years:

  • Gold: the GLD has still not taken out it’s Sept, 2011, $185.85 high. It’s 10-year return is negative, or maybe by now, just barely positive;
  • Emerging Markets ex China (NASDAQ:EMXC): It’s tough to own anything Chinese, but even the standard EM ETF or fund from June 30 ’07 has returned just 2% – 3% annually;
  • Europe/European ETFs: thinking mainly about the iShares MSCI EAFE ETF (NYSE:EFA).

No doubt there are others. Let me know your favorite “worst performers since 2009 – 2010 or before that.

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With Walmart (NYSE:WMT) and Cisco (NASDAQ:CSCO) report this week, it is the “unofficial” end of 3rd quarter ’21 reporting season, and the 3rd quarter hasn’t been that bad, despite the fears coming into the 3rd quarter earnings releases from several higher-profile commentators.

That being said, investors now face “tougher comps” in Q4 ’21 and 2022, so it’s likely readers and investors are going to see an emerging bearish tone to forward earnings.

And it’s not wrong, but it’s really more of a “return-to-normal” for annual S&P 500 earnings and revenue growth, more than anything else.

What is worrisome today (and as a portfolio manager, there is ALWAYS something that is worrisome) is that more retail clients and even many institutional investors are worried about the stock market, while the real problem—if and when it does arise—may lay with the bond market(s).

h2 S&P 500 metrics/h2
  • The forward 4-quarter estimate fell this past week to $214.77 from the previous week’s $214.95. The forward estimate is returning to a more normal pattern where it jumps sharply higher at the start of a new quarter and then starts to slide gradually into the end of the quarter but remains above the final week print of the prior quarter. For example, the forward 4-quarter estimate for the last full week of September ’21 was $206.60 or roughly $206 – $207. The estimate jumped to $213.17 the first full week of October ’21 as we added a new quarter and dropped off the old quarter for the “forward 4-quarter” estimate. As long as the forward 4-quarter estimate remains above $206 – $207 by the end of December ’21, the pattern is consistent with “normal” (i.e., non-pandemic) earnings patterns. This is actually the first sign that S&P 500 earnings forecasts are beginning to return to non-pandemic patterns. Ed Yardeni has written about this pattern as has Jeff Miller (A Dash of Insight) in the earlier part of the 2010 decade.
  • The PE ratio last week was 21.8x exactly the same as the week before last;
  • The S&P 500 earnings yield ticked up to 4.59% from the week before last’s 4.58%.
h2 Looking ahead by quarter/h2
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