The Long And The Short Of It: Investors Focus On Oz Corporate Earnings

 | Jul 31, 2017 03:00AM ET

While Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) report earnings at 06:30 aest on Wednesday, as a whole US earnings will become less of an issue for investors from here, and the focus turns to Aussie corporate earnings and back to economic data trends and specifically the inflationary readings.

Let’s recap, because 57% of S&P 500 corporate have reported earnings, and we find 78% have beaten the streets forecast on earnings, by an average of 5.2%, while 72% of beaten on sales.

Great numbers, but that’s not going to surprise as this level of beats are only modestly above the average we see over past quarters. What is positive though is aggregate EPS growth thus far is an impressive 10.6%, with top line growth at 6% and both numbers are nicely higher than what was expected going into reporting season. With valuations getting quite a bit of focus, this is the sort of earnings growth that will keep the bulls happy, yet far more needs to happen going forward if we are to avoid a correction in Q417 to Q118 when we step back from liquidity driven markets to one where we go back to our roots and look at return on equity and earnings growth.

How many companies do we see trading at a discount to intrinsic value? Not many.

The earnings batten though has been handed to Japan, where we see over 350 companies reporting today alone. It’s also a busy reporting calendar in Europe too, so European equity markets should be well traded and specifically, I will be watching the German DAX, where price action is looking very interesting indeed, with price closing the gap from 21 April and Friday's candle looks like clear exhaustion from the sellers.

A move through Fridays high today and I would be looking for a rally in the DAX, potentially into 12,500. Of course, Aussie earning season officially kicks off tomorrow with Navitas (AX:NVT) and then Rio (AX:RIO) being the biggy. Again, the focus for me is not so much about whether corporates can beat the street's forecasts on earnings, but whether the outlooks are sufficient and inspirational enough for the market to break the 5850 to 5675 range it’s been in since mid-May.