S&P 500 Earnings: Estimates Slip For 2023; Recession Worries Start To Multiply

 | May 29, 2022 01:34AM ET

Looking at the capital markets action this week, credit spreads improved, the US dollar fell (as measured by the Invesco DB US Dollar Index Bullish Fund (NYSE:UUP)), the 10-year and 30-year Treasury yields haven’t made new highs in weeks, the PCE deflator data came in as expected, and lower year-over-year, and stocks bounced sharply.

This week’s returns:

  • UUP: -1.38%
  • HYG: +4.81%
  • JNK: +4.87%
  • AGG: +0.94%
  • SPY: +6.59%
  • NASDAQ Comp: +6.8%
  • QQQ: +7.07%

You could call this week just a huge reversal of the 7–8 week trends.

The S&P 500, NASDAQ Composite and the NASDAQ 100 remain very oversold, which is a plus.

The S&P 500’s bounce off 3,800 last Friday was a significant move: as this site pointed out a number of times, the 3,800 level on the S&P 500 was a 1/3rd retracement of the March ’20 lows to the early January ’22 highs, which is (symmetrically, anyway) a perfect pullback or correction that doesn’t have to indicate a secular bear market is at hand.

h3 S&P 500 data: /h3
  • The forward 4-quarter estimate fell to $233.49 from last week’s $235.22. The last 5–6 weeks has seen the forward estimate gyrate between $234–$235 until this week;
  • The PE ratio on the forward estimate rose to 17.7x from last week’s 16.5x based on the 6.2% increase in the S&P 500 this week;
  • The S&P 500 earnings yield fell to 5.62% from 6.03% last week;
  • The Q1 ’22 bottom-up estimate for the S&P 500 rose a penny to $54.85 from $54.84 last week;

Watching expected quarterly EPS and revenue growth rates: