What to Expect From the Q1 Earnings Reporting Season

 | Apr 02, 2024 08:39AM ET

  • The Q1 consensus figure bottomed and may move higher as the season progresses, leading the market.
  • Consensus figures for Q2, Q3, and Q4 have also increased, suggesting a sustained rally is possible.
  • The FOMC is a risk and may lead to a mid-summer correction if it doesn't follow through on interest rate cut expectations.
  • There are less than two weeks until the peak of the Q1 earnings reporting season gets underway, and it looks like it could be a good one. Several factors suggest the market rally can continue through the end of the period and perhaps until the end of the year. Among them are the fact that earnings are growing, the outlook for accelerating growth, and upward revisions to the numbers. The risks include the FOMC and interest rate cuts, slowly getting priced out of the market.

    h2 A Bottom in Sentiment Could Turn Into a Tailwind /h2

    The consensus figure for Q1 2024 S&P 500 earnings growth reported by Factset has trended lower over the last year, but some signs in the data suggest the headwind is diminishing and may reverse course soon.

    The first is that earnings growth will persist in Q1 and 2024. This is an extension of a trend that began in 2023 and is expected to hold steady through 2025. The second is that earnings growth is expected to accelerate over the next four quarters and may exceed the current consensus. The S&P 500 tends to outperform each quarter's cycle-starting consensus figures by at least a few hundred basis points, which leads us to the third and perhaps most crucial factor: revisions.

    The S&P 500 tends to outperform each quarter’s consensus figure, but each quarter’s figure also tends to trend lower ahead of the cycle. This year, at least for now, the revisions' downtrend has stalled. The Q1 figure appears to have bottomed, while the Q2, Q3, and Q4 figures flattened and curved upward. If this continues, the S&P 500 will likely follow as increased earnings potential is priced into the market, but there is risk. Downward revisions may come if results and guidance fail to impress.