The Week Ahead: Economic Message From Fourth Quarter Earnings?

 | Jan 18, 2015 03:15AM ET

Investors have another holiday-shortened week ahead and a light calendar of economic data. Last week included the “official” start of earnings season, but things are really heating up now.

I expect market participants to be watching closely for The Message from Corporate Earnings.

h3 Prior Theme Recap
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In last week’s WTWA I predicted that there would be a focus on the message from the bond market. That was very accurate, even more so if extended to commodity prices which traded in tandem. Some Gavyn Davies thinks the commodity markets are right, but that stocks have not incorporated that viewpoint. Interesting.

The stock market I was following seems pretty much in knee-jerk reaction to the commodity news. Hale Stewart has a more balanced conclusion, with an interesting angle on the commodity trading from Chinese hedge funds. Whatever viewpoint you choose, it was a good guess for last week’s theme.

Bond yields moved lower still, but the explanations remained varied. Michael Aneiro at Barron’s Current Yield captures all of the factors:

New reasons for yields to fall keep coming from all directions on a seemingly daily basis. Early last week the World Bank cut its forecast for global growth, and Treasury yields fell. On Wednesday, the Commerce Department reported that U.S. retail sales fell by 0.9% in December, the sharpest drop in a year, and Treasury yields fell. On Thursday, Switzerland’s central bank ended a longstanding exchange-rate cap, causing the Swiss franc to soar versus the euro, boosting safe-haven investments and causing Treasury yields to fall.

Feel free to join in my exercise in thinking about the upcoming theme. We would all like to know the direction of the market in advance. Good luck with that! Second best is planning what to look for and how to react. That is the purpose of considering possible themes for the week ahead.

h3 This Week’s Theme
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There is much less economic news in the holiday-shortened week ahead. The State of the Union Address will attract some attention on Tuesday evening, but there is a lot of advance information. The ECB will announce QE plans on Thursday, but that is also widely anticipated.

I expect the real focus for the week to be corporate earnings – always important, but now even more so. Analyst expectations are dropping rapidly. (FactSet reports that 84% of companies have beaten expectations so far. Guidance is 4-2 positive (yes, only six cases). It does not feel like it was very good. Market standards seem demanding.

  • Energy companies. Are the earnings for this sector (and by implication the overall market) overstated? This could prompt some revised thinking. Earnings expert Brian Gilmartin remains confident about earnings growth ex-energy, looking for a year-over-year gain of 6.7%. He is more cautious about energy.
  • Energy cap-ex and employment. There has already been a move to attribute the bulk of employment gains to growth in the U.S. energy business – direct and indirect. Any job cuts will get highlighted as evidence, as was the case in the Schlumberger NV (NYSE:SLB) report .
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    As always, I have some additional ideas in today’s conclusion. But first, let us do our regular update of the last week’s news and data. Readers, especially those new to this series, will benefit from reading the background information .

    h3 Last Week’s Data/h3

    Each week I break down events into good and bad. Often there is “ugly” and on rare occasions something really good. My working definition of “good” has two components:

    1. The news is market-friendly. Our personal policy preferences are not relevant for this test. And especially – no politics.
    2. It is better than expectations.

    The Good

    There was a normal news week, with a negative tilt.

    • A government shutdown is “off the table” according to Senate Republicans. This removes one significant market worry. (The Hill ).
    • An advisory European Court gave a preliminary OK to the ECB’s quantitative easing plan, (FT ).
    • CPI increases remain low. Brian Wesbury has a complete analysis showing that the results would be even lower without items like imputed rent.
    • Industrial production registered a slight beat.
    • Job openings reached another multi-year high. The market is treating this as a positive, so I’ll call it “good,” but the number of quits declined again. Most would be surprised to learn that 2.6 million people voluntarily left jobs last month. (BLS ).
    • Michigan sentiment hit an 11-year high with a reading of 98.1. This has been a good coincident indicator for employment and consumption, so perhaps the lower gas prices are having an effect. Doug Short’s chart of this is still the best, drawing together all of the key factors and providing a good historical perspective.