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Just Six Charts (Ahead Of Earnings)
Companies have been guiding the Street lower and managing expectations for earnings. The ratio of negative-to-positive guidance is now at all-time highs. For every one instance of positive guidance we have seen more than three instances of negative guidance versus consensus. From a slow-and-steady top-line growth trajectory that entirely ignores a global slowdown and the possibility of declining revenue to the sharp contraction in Q1 2013 expectations (and implicitly even more hockey-stick-like recovery in the second half), these six charts should provide some compelling evidence of the miracle-like consensus 'hope' priced into these markets (unless of course we rely on every asset-gatherers fall-back - multiple expansion - as we noted earlier).
Via Morgan Stanley's Adam Parker:
Companies have been guiding the Street lower and managing expectations for earnings. The ratio of negative-to-positive guidance is now at all-time highs. For every one instance of positive guidance we have seen more than three instances of negative guidance versus consensus...
The consensus top-line growth trajectory is fairly typical – a slow and steady improvement that does not account for budget cuts in the US or a recession in Europe (i.e., the risk of declining revenue)...
Earnings expectations for 2013 have declined substantially since the start of 2012. 2013 EPS estimates have fallen from $121 at the beginning of 2012 to $112 now - but remain high - even as during the last three months, S&P 500 2013 estimates have declined by 1.8%. The consensus expectations of $124 for 2014 also appear way too high...
Q1 2013 earnings expectations have seen sharp downward revisions in the last three months and are now near the levels attained in the last four quarters (so no growth at all)...
But while consensus earnings estimates embed this small year-over-year 1% rebound in Q1 – the typical second half rebound is also even more embedded in the consensus forecasts.
As incremental margin expansion expectations (or soul-destroying labor cuts) appear remarkably confident...
The question is: do people care?
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Earnings no longer matter. The Fed in the only game in town.
And where would we be if the 5 Trillion that was magically added these last 5 years was not there. POOF! All gone.
I cared but then I was run over by reality
Oliver Twist: Can I have more POMO please sir?
nice charts
What earnings we do see are smoke and mirrors. Where are the 5 million jobs we lost? lumber sales show the real housing boom.Who's having earnings,The top six banks. US is buggerred.
A 14 multiple on 111.92 = 1566.88. Not much multiple expansion. Not much growth either.
No no, you have it all wrong.
Factor in 14 PE for SP500 now, 15 PE next month, 16 PE the following and go from there ...
Shit! Did you get the memo?You obviously did not read the memo. You probably fucked up your TPF report also...
I think your referring to the TPS reports.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fy3rjQGc6lA
Benny-Flow Baby!
Natty is set for a pullback. Forwards are compressing