S&P 500 Earnings Update: Corporate High-Yield Had a Good Week

 | Feb 05, 2023 04:16AM ET

Twitter was the first medium – I believe it was Lisa Abramowicz of Bloomberg – that noted that the February 2nd, 2023, rally in the corporate high-yield asset class was the strongest day of spread narrowing since November ’20. This was confirmed by a long-time friend who has managed corporate bond money for 35 years – both insurance and total-return money – who confirmed that Thursday, February 2, 2023, was the 13th biggest “tightening” (i.e. spread tightening) day in the last 10 years.

Probably due to the pandemic, this economic and S&P 500 earnings cycle is different.

Here’s how clients' taxable high-yield performed this week:

  • PHDAX: +91 bp’s on the week, to 4.76% from 3.85% last week;
  • HYG ETF: +81 bp’s on the week to 4.25% from 3.44% last week;
  • SHYG (short duration hi yld ETF): +64 bp’s on the week from 3.16% to 2.52% last week;

The returns represent YTD ’23 returns as of 2/4/23 and then 1/27/23.

The implication for the stock market is clear: spread tightening over longer periods of time is a positive underlying condition for both the US stock market and bond markets, as well as – generally speaking – the US economy since it says, the US credit markets are open and functioning.

While the benchmark revisions muddied the January ’23 jobs report numbers, and we could likely see downward revisions in the months ahead, the fact is that the US economy remains in fairly good shape. Services PMI on Friday. released after the nonfarm payroll report, shot back up to 55. It was a month ago, the day of the December ’22 jobs report in early January when the Services PMI came in much worse-than-expected at 45, when “the Street” thought the services part of the US economy was finally capitulating to higher interest rates. Average the two months and Services is about 50, and neither expanding nor contracting.

But, the fly in the ointment is SP 500 earnings, and while I do think a component of the current weakness is the “normalization” of SP 500 earnings growth after 2020 and 2021 (post-pandemic) particularly within the tech sector, there is an “economic cyclicality” to the SP 500 earnings story.

SP 500 Earnings data:

  • The forward 4-quarter (FFQE) earnings estimate for the SP 500 fell this past week to $223.28 from last week’s $225.02 which was a sequential decline of -0.77%, the sharpest sequential drop since the last time big tech reported earnings in late October, early November ’22.
  • The PE ratio as of Friday, February 3rd’s close was 18.5x versus last week’s 18x;
  • The SP 500 earnings yield fell to 5.40%, from last week’s 5.53% and Sept 30, ’22’s 6.53%;
  • The Q4 ’22 bottom-up SP 500 estimate rose last week to $53.44 from the prior week’s $53.26. That is a positive, although forward estimates continue to be under pressure;
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