With corporate profits set to fall for calendar year 2022 (final results won’t be known for weeks), the big question for equity investors is whether 2023 will bring stability on that front or not. Wall Street strategists largely expect another decline as economic headwinds accumulate, but the sell side is staying rosy (current consensus forecast is earnings growth of ~10%) and likely will continue that stance until companies explicitly give them 2023 guidance because they have very little reason to go out on a limb and make their own forecasts.
The economic and investment climate today reminds me a lot of 2015-2016. Back then earnings also showed a year-over-year decline (2015) during a time when overall economic indicators remained bright. The U.S. unemployment rate fell that year, and GDP growth actually accelerated. The biggest culprit for profits was energy prices, which fell dramatically and sparked a wave of financial distress for much of that sector and the lenders who funded their operations. Fortunately, the energy bear market eventually resolved itself through normal supply and demand rebalancing and overall U.S. corporate earnings rose in 2016 and set a new record in 2017. The result was only a single down year for the U.S. stock market.
From my vantage point, tech is the new energy in this comparison. The pandemic brought forward a ton of growth for digital businesses and now that pent-up demand is waning, growth has slowed materially (going negative for many companies) and layoffs are mounting. But as was the case back in 2015, the rest of the economy is pulling its weight just fine. There are labor shortages in many areas, which has resulted in the U.S. unemployment rate actually dropping over the last 12 months (4.0% to 3.4%) despite the Federal Reserve raising the Fed Funds interest rate by a stunning 450 basis points during that time.
You can tell the stock market isn’t really sure what to make of all this. After a sharp drop in 2022, this year has started with a bang as earnings are holding up so far and GDP growth remains in the black with more jobs created every month. The thesis that corporate profits fall in 2023 may still play out, but the timetable on which that becomes obvious keeps getting pushed out, which means stock prices can start to discount the possibility that such a scenario doesn’t materialize (what we are seeing this week).
I think watching the job market is the key. What if we can get through a full rate hiking cycle with the unemployment rate staying below, say, 5%, and most of the firings come from big tech companies? Could most of those workers find new jobs with “smaller and older” tech businesses who previously couldn’t compete with posh offers from the likes of Google and Facebook? If so, we might just see a soft landing after all. With the consumer always the main driver of the U.S. economy, they will tell the story this cycle as well. Without strong incomes, the negative impact on the bottom lines for lenders and sectors like hospitality, retail, and entertainment becomes a downhill wipeout.
Where do I think we wind up? Hard to say, but I definitely think the current 2023 earnings forecast of $223 (versus $200-$205 for 2022) is overly optimistic. If we can’t push much past $200 with the current backdrop today’s S&P 500 quote of 4,100+ appears quite rich with a 3.5% 10-year bond yield. For the bullish scenario to play out we would probably need to see growth in 2023 (say, $210+) with a clear path towards an acceleration in 2024 to $230+ (after all, 18 times $230 equates to 4,140 on the S&P 500). Buckle your seatbelts… if January was any indication the range of outcomes is quite wide.