S&P 500 Earnings Update: Slow Erosion Continues Amid Powell’s 2018-Esque Reversal

 | Dec 12, 2022 12:02AM ET

The 60% / 40% benchmark portfolio’s YTD return, as of 12/9/22, was -16.24%. Here’s how the YTD returns have unfolded since 9/30/22:

  • 11/30/22: -12.81%
  • 10/31/22: -16.84%
  • 9/30/22: -20.11%

The low water market in terms of YTD returns at the weekend was 10/14/22’s -20.57% print, which was worse than the week the June ’22 S&P 500 lows were made, which was -17.98%.

The point is that sentiment remains very dour, both retail and institutional sentiment, even though “balanced account” YTD returns have improved in the last 8 weeks.

h2 The Fed: 2018 and 1994/h2

The one aspect of the last 2018 monetary tightening period by Jay Powell and the FOMC that I still remember today is how fast Powell pivoted in the last week of December ’18 towards a much more friendly monetary stance, even after the hawkish mid-December, 2018, comments. At that time, it was a clear 180-degree shift and the S&P 500 sniffed it out within 10 days of that previously-mentioned mid-December 2018 stance.

Contrast this with Greenspan’s much more deliberate and often data-rigorous decisions in 1994, where the Fed Chair continued to raise rates into early 1995 even though the S&P 500 bottomed in late 1994. Investors were shell-shocked back then even though the AGG was down just 2% in 1994, a paltry drawdown considering the -11.6% drop in the Barclays (LON:BARC) AGG YTD in 2022.

Here’s an interesting link from the Dallas Fed written this summer, 2022, on the connection between Fed rate hikes and emerging markets. Assuming it was written by 3 Fed staffers and not necessarily the Wall Street crowd, I disagreed with some of the articles.

The article talks about the peso collapse in 1994, which was one of the catalysts which eventually forced Greenspan to change monetary policy in early 1995. Still, I was a fixed-income / credit analyst at that time. I was listening to one of our other analysts talk about Mexico’s large amount of dollar-denominated debt, in addition to their dwindling forex reserves prior to the peso collapse.

This kid called the Mexican peso collapse before it happened, but because it was on the fixed-income/credit side of the business, it was the “tree falling in the forest,” so to speak. My own opinion is that 2022 is different from 1994 because of Ukraine and the energy markets and that aftermath, not to mention the very strong dollar this year.

(Anyway, didn’t mean to distract readers. In this blog’s brief and concise 2023 stock and bond market(s) preview written last Thursday night, emerging markets and international Non-US asset classes look very attractive from a long-term return perspective coming into 2023.)

h2 S&P 500 earnings data: (Source data is IBES data by Refinitiv, calculations are my own):/h2
  • The forward 4-quarter estimate (FFQE) fell slightly this week to $224.78 from $224.91, for a minor sequential decline of -0.6%. Since 9/30/22, the FFQE has fallen from $230 to today’s $224.
  • The PE ratio on the current estimate is 17.5x versus the 9/30/22 PE of 15.5x
  • The S&P 500 earnings yield is now 5.71% after Friday’s weak close, the highest earnings yield since 11/4/22.
  • The Q4 ’22 bottom-up estimate has fallen roughly 6% from it’s 9/30/22 value of $57.91 to today’s value of $54.44.
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For reader’s edification, Ed Yardeni, the dean of S&P 500 EPS forecasters, still has – to my knowledge – a $215 EPS estimate on the S&P 500 for full-year 2022, which won’t be known until mid-February ’23. Still, that estimate would imply that Q4 ’22 bottom-up EPS estimate is below $50 per share from its current estimate this weekend of $54.44 per share, which would be a sharp decline, so watch for negative earnings pre-announcements as we head into year-end 2022.

Either we’ll see negative pre-announcements heading into year-end 2022 or even very early January ’23, or the current EPS estimate for the S&P 500 of $220’ish will hold up through Q4 ’22 earnings.

h2 Rate-of-change: Heavy downward revisions have slowed:/h2