The Week Ahead: Start Of An Earnings Recession?

 | Apr 12, 2015 01:21AM ET

Despite a full slate of economic news and data, I expect earnings season to command special attention in the week ahead. For the first time since the Great Recession it is possible that corporate earnings will contract for two consecutive quarters. With the media penchant for colorful characterizations, I expect this to be a dominant theme as we all consider the coming week’s earnings reports.

Is this the start of an “earnings recession”?

h3 Prior Theme Recap/h3

In my last WTWA I predicted that attention would center on the apparently growing potential for a correction in stocks. That was the right question at the week’s start, with a carryover effect from the prior Friday’s employment report. With stocks not trading and futures down on the employment news, everyone knew the week would have a bad start.

This was the big theme on Michael Batnick has a nice post on how quickly the market shrugged off the employment news and the general irrelevance of short-term economic data.

When it became clear that this story was not playing out, producers, editors, and writers switched to the Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) watch and the General Electric (NYSE:GE) restructuring. The question of whether a correction was looming was timely, and for now, the answer seems to be “no.”

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 plenty of economic data this week, including some major reports. More important will be the first big week of corporate earnings. If you are not familiar with the term, “earnings recession,” then get ready. You will hear it a lot, especially if there is weakness in early reports.

An earnings recession describes a circumstance where corporate earnings decline for two consecutive quarters, somewhat analogous to the commonplace (but flawed) definition of a recession as two consecutive quarters of negative growth. While earnings season is always important, this one has special significance. After a quarter of softer economic data, everyone wants to know what effect there was on profits. Look for pundits to be asking:

Is this the start of an earnings recession?

h3 The Viewpoints/h3

The viewpoints cover the typical wide range.

  • An earnings recession is likely and important. (Akin Oyedele at BI summarizes the Bank of America take).
  • A quarter of lower earnings is likely, as the result of energy stocks, weather, and a stronger dollar – all temporary.
  • An earnings recession is possible, but unimportant. (Paul Vigna – WSJ )
  • No way! Earnings will eke out a small gain despite the temporary effects. Brian Belski says “Bunk.” He cites the delayed benefits from lower energy prices and the lower bar set by estimate reductions.
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Stefan Cheplick reports on the decline in estimates, including this helpful chart: