S&P 500 Forward Earnings Estimates Continue To Be Revised Lower

 | Aug 28, 2022 12:33AM ET

Per the IBES data by Refinitiv, the forward estimates for the S&P 500, continue to be revised lower, which is actually not that unusual from the normal pattern of how earnings estimates evolve during a quarter, but when you combine it with a tightening monetary policy and the looming risk of recession, it just adds another log to the building bonfire (dumpster fire ?) known as the 2022 stock and bond market returns.

YTD as of Friday night, the S&P 500 is down -14.9% after today’s rout.

The sentiment is absolutely horrid and yet we could still end up with a day like today – Friday, August 26, 2022 – where the S&P 500 fell -3.37%, the Nasdaq fell -3.94% and the Dow fell -3.03%.

The irony about today was that the PCE prices and PCE Core (inflation measures) actually came in better-than-expected, but it’s July 2022 data (almost 2 months old) and it didn’t matter since Jay Powell stepped on the stock market with his “more pain ahead” commentary. The PCE deflator (the personal consumption expenditures deflator) is actually the Fed’s preferred inflation measure, and it was improved, and it didn’t matter at all.

S&P 500 data:

  • The forward 4-quarter estimate (FFQE) fell again this week to $232.55 from last week’s $232.60, and has now been revised lower every week since the quarter started on 7/1/22;
  • The PE ratio is 17.5x based on Friday, August 26’s close;
  • The S&P 500 earnings yield has now risen for the 2nd straight week to 5.77%, versus last week’s 5.50%. During the last Fed tightening cycle in late, 2018, the S&P 500 earnings yield hit 7% near the peak of the correction.

The “rate of change” of calendar S&P 500 EPS estimates: