Deutschķ•œźµ­ģ–“ ę—„ęœ¬čŖžäø­ę–‡EspaƱolFranƧaisÕ€Õ”ÕµÕ„Ö€Õ„Õ¶NederlandsŠ ŃƒŃŃŠŗŠøŠ¹ItalianoPortuguĆŖsTĆ¼rkƧe
Portfolio TrackerSwapCryptocurrenciesPricingIntegrationsNewsEarnBlogNFTWidgetsDeFi Portfolio Tracker24h ReportPress KitAPI Docs

Five things to expect from January and February 2024 earnings season

10M agoā€¢
bullish:

0

bearish:

0

What to expect from earnings season in January 2024

Itā€™s that time of year againā€¦ Weā€™re speaking, of course, of earnings season. As January often brings the Q4 and full results for the financial year, itā€™s both a beginning and a reflecting time for investors.

But, with 2023 having been such an unpredictable year ā€“ especially with its surprise happy ending of a ā€˜soft landingā€™ for the United States ā€“ what should investors expect from earnings season this time around? Weā€™ve highlighted five things to look out for.

1. Disappointing numbers from banking stocks

Today (January 8th), the Financial Times reported that the bigger US bank stocks are expected to report a steep increase in defaults from customers, due to the still-punitive interest rates most consumers face. This is expected to have shrunk most banksā€™ earnings somewhat, even though the interest itself is worth more, since theyā€™re getting less of whatā€™s owed to them.

In fact, some have seen the writing on the wall with this one for some time. Moodyā€™s rating agency downgraded banksā€™ outlook, based on this, in early December. Similarly, Fitchā€™s rating agency also said in December that:

We expect 2024 default rates of 3.5 percent to four percent for leveraged loans, and five to 5.5 percent for [corporate high yield], up from 2023 default forecasts of three percent to 3.5 percent.ā€

Fitchā€™s directly linked this to the macroenvironment and its effect on banksā€™ cash flows.

The higher-for-longer interest rate environment will erode highly leveraged issuersā€™ free cash flow positions, as we expect many of them to be unable to offset the higher interest expense through EBITDA growth, especially as many issuers are experiencing declining operating performance. In tandem with a slowing economy and tighter access to capital markets, this will lead to an increase in 2024 default volume.ā€

2. Splashy dividends from fuel stocks

ā€˜Itā€™s raining dividends, hallelujahā€™ could arguably be then anthem for energy stock investors this quarter.

For example, ExxonMobil announced in December that itā€™s set to deliver a whopping $14 billion in earnings and cash flow growth over the next four years ā€“ and that it plans to more than double its earnings by 2027 from its 2019 levels, along with boasting ā€œincreased shareholder distributions.ā€

TotalEnergies increased their dividend by seven percent in 2023 for all quarters, while Shell have paid out dividends worth more than $11 billion in the past year, as pointed out by Global Witness. Ā 

Some, however, are skeptical of the longer-term future of fuel stocks in the wake of COP28ā€™s historic pledge to ā€˜phase out fossil fuelsā€™, and see the extravagant dividends as a honeypot attempt by a doomed industry to keep investors interested even as its days are numbered.

See more: Big oil, big dividendsā€¦ not-so-big earnings?

3. Luxury stocks to be interesting in 2024

According to Statista, the luxury market (including luxury watches and jewellery, designer fashion and upmarket cosmetics and fragrances) is expected to grow by about $14 billion (about three percent) in 2024 to represent a total of around $369 billion worldwide.

In spite of this, luxury brands themselves had a touch time in 2023. The share price of LVMH sank in October 2023 when it reported a revenue growth of nine percent in its latest earnings report ā€“ a significant decline from Q2ā€™s 17 percent. Its rival, Prada, similarly saw share prices drop more than ten percent in the last quarter of 2023.

High inflation has largely been blamed for these disappointing figures ā€“ that non-essential aspirational purchases take a backseat in such climates.

This means that, now, with inflation seemingly under control in the US (the worldā€™s largest luxury-buyer currently) and with interest rates set to drop from sometime in 2024, it will be interesting to see what next for the worldā€™s most well-heeled stocks.

4. A titan time for tech stocks

Itā€™s been a full year since AI fever swept the globe, with ChatGPTā€™s wildfire-like spread in December 2022. And now, in 2024, AI looks set to be trending again, according to a Fortune article which stated that:

We believeĀ tech stocks will be up 25% in 2024,ā€™ [Wedbush analyst Dan] Ives wroteā€¦ adding that ā€œthe Street and tech world await ā€˜the Year of AI.ā€™ā€

While tech stocks encompass far more than just AI and robotics, itā€™s certainly been a cracker for tech stocks. Fidelity reported recently that the information technology sectorā€™s performance, as of January 5th, is expected to have increased by an average of 51 percent in the past year.

This is especially impressive when compared to energy stocks, which were down 0.17 percent in the same period, and the mighty consumer staples sector, which usually do well in times of high inflation, sitting at a performance of -2.18 percent.

5. Divisive opinions on the Magnificent Seven

The heavy-hitter US stocks nicknamed the ā€˜magnificent sevenā€™ ā€“ namely Apple, Nvidia, Tesla, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon and Meta Platforms ā€“ are getting very different outlooks this quarter.

Many analysts and market experts are predicting that the giants will take a well-earned rest in 2024, with earnings dipping marginally below their historic highs in 2023.

Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs has said that:

The massive outperformance of the ā€œMagnificent 7ā€ mega-cap tech stocks has been a defining feature of the equity market in 2023. The stocks should collectively outperform the remainder of the index in 2024ā€¦ However, the risk/reward profile of this trade is not especially attractive given elevated expectations.ā€

The post Five things to expect from January and February 2024 earnings season appeared first on Invezz

10M agoā€¢
bullish:

0

bearish:

0

Manage all your crypto, NFT and DeFi from one place

Securely connect the portfolio youā€™re using to start.