Tech-Sector Earnings: Analysts Expect A Slowdown

 | Jan 16, 2019 02:23PM ET

Normally the information technology sector is seen as a higher-growth arena, but that doesn’t look to be the case this quarter as Q4 earnings season gets underway.

As of Jan. 9, the blended revenue growth rate, a measure that includes analyst estimates and reported results, is just 1.7% year over year, according to Reuters data. That’s lagging every other sector except for utilities. Top-line results are expected to grow at a faster pace, with a blended earnings growth rate of 8.5% year over year, 7th out of 11 sectors. Granted, some of that has been attributed to certain tech companies being shifted to the newly formed communications services sector.

Matching the high-level data, a few of the biggest names in the space have warned of a sales slowdown. Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) is often looked to as a barometer for the tech sector due to its size and global reach and it flashed warning signs recently that its fiscal Q1, which ended December 29, wasn’t going to be what the company or analysts had hoped.

In an investor letter, CEO Tim Cook lowered AAPL’s revenue guidance for the quarter to $84 billion, 4.8% lower than last year’s results for the same quarter. Analysts had been expecting closer to $91 billion for the quarter and AAPL previously forecasted revenue in the range of $89 billion to $93 billion.

Apple’s reasons for the lowered guidance read like a laundry list of the growing concerns that analysts have had about the broader tech sector. Apple CEO Cook cited challenges in emerging markets and said “we did not foresee the magnitude of the economic deceleration, particularly in Greater China,” while noting that more than 100% of the company’s year-over-year revenue decline occurred in that region. In addition, Cook pointed to increased consumer uncertainty in China amid heightened trade tensions between the U.S. and China.

Guidance updates like this can often weigh on sector sentiment until results from more companies are released or other data emerges.