What the Analysts Say About the Second-Quarter Earnings Season

By: Chad Fraser, Investing Daily

The second-quarter earnings season unofficially kicked off yesterday, with Alcoa AA playing its traditional role of being the first company out of the gate. The aluminum giant reported its latest results right after the closing bell.

The company’s numbers will set the tone for the second-quarter earnings season. Here’s how they looked:

In its latest quarter, Alcoa’s sales fell 9.4%, to $5.96 billion from $6.59 billion a year ago. The company lost $2 million, or broke even on a per-share basis. That’s down sharply from a profit of $322 million, or $0.28 a share, a year ago.

However, if you exclude a large number of unusual items, such as restructuring costs and $45 million to settle a civil lawsuit, earnings came in at $6.0 million, or $0.06 a share. On that basis, they beat the $0.05 a share that the Street was expecting.

Aluminum prices have fallen 18% from a year ago, and global production continues to exceed demand, as it has for the past eight years.

Alcoa’s Report Is Still a Positive for the Second-Quarter Earnings Season

Even so, the company reported slightly higher aluminum shipments, thanks in part to higher demand from the aerospace and automobile industries. Car sales are expected to climb 11% this year, and aircraft manufacturers have record order backlogs as airlines replace their old planes with new, more fuel-efficient models.

Alcoa stood by its prediction of an aluminum supply deficit in 2012, largely due to production cuts in China. The company also affirmed its forecast of a 7% rise in aluminum demand during the year.

In their downstream business and midstream business, those two pieces, we are seeing margin expansion,” Citigroup analyst Brian Yu told Bloomberg Businessweek. “It’s a sign that, yes, the company is doing some things right.”

Why Many Analysts Are Pessimistic About the Second-Quarter Earnings Season

Despite Alcoa’s earnings beat, most analysts are downcast about the coming earnings season. Here are three main reasons why:

1. Reduced guidance from many S&P 500 companies: According to Reuters, more than 85 members of the S&P 500 have recently lowered their earnings guidance, including Procter & Gamble PG, which feels its sales dipped 1% to 2% in the quarter ended June 30. Ford Motor Company F has also said that it expects to report higher losses at its businesses outside North America.

On the surface, expectations still look strong: overall earnings are expected to rise 5.8% from a year ago. But if you strip out Bank of America BAC, which is expected to show a huge profit increase due to the settlement of a mortgage-related lawsuit, and Apple AAPL, that number drops into negative territory: a decline of 0.4%.

A further challenge is the tough year-over-year comparison: in the second quarter of 2011, S&P 500 companies posted profit growth of more than 19%, according to USAToday.

2. Europe’s ongoing woes — and a slowdown in China:  According to CBS Moneywatch, about 14% of all S&P 500 company sales come from Europe, so the continent is bound to be a dominant theme as earnings season plays out. In addition, growth is cooling in China, the world’s third-biggest economy. The country’s economy likely expanded 7.6% in the quarter ended June 30, but that’s still down from a year ago, and would mark China’s sixth straight quarter of slower growth.

“It’s natural to expect that somehow the U.S. corporate sector, which has been a bright spot in this recovery, is not going to emerge unscathed,” said Brian Gendreau, a market strategist with Cetera Financial Group.

3. Continued weakness in the U.S.:  Friday’s labor department numbers showed that 80,000 jobs were created in the U.S. in June, well below the 100,000 positions that analysts were expecting. That added to worries about another recession and darkened the mood heading into earnings season. 

“Buying stocks and hiring people are both things you do when you want to take risks,” said Jerry Webman, chief economist at Oppenheimer Funds, in a MarketWatch article. Right now, he says, the current uncertainty is keeping “investors and employers from wanting to take additional risk.”

Low Expectations for Second-Quarter Earnings Season Could Actually Spark a Rally

Despite the significant challenges ahead, there are a number of reasons why stocks could still rally in the coming months. The main one is the low earnings expectations themselves, as The Wall Street Journal points out:

“The big caveat, of course, is companies have gotten pretty good at setting low expectations. That enables them to leap over the lowered expectations bar and earn a coveted upside earnings surprise, which the market tends to cheer. Stocks could pop even if year-over-year earnings numbers don’t look so hot.”

Lower Oil Prices, Interest Rate Cuts Could Spur Longer Term Stock Market Gains

Another interesting angle to watch will be the effect of lower oil prices on corporate bottom lines. According to Forbes, oil prices are down 12% from a year ago, and prices for many other commodities have also fallen. That obviously hurts commodity producers, but it should help consumers, including manufacturers, consumer-product makers and, most obviously, shipping companies.

Over the longer term, as Investing Daily editor Jim Fink recently pointed out in “Is the Stock Market Ready to Rally?” some recent actions by external actors could help spur an upturn in stocks. These include the June 29 EU Summit, which concluded with an agreement to bail out European banks directly rather than through governments. This avoids adding to already ballooning sovereign debts.

In addition, as Fink notes, a number of central banks around the world have recently cut interest rates to give their economies a push, including the European Central Bank. Perhaps most importantly, China has cut interest rates for the second time in a month as falling inflation gives the country more options to spur its growth.

Article originally posted here.

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