Investors will focus on falling profits, a more dovish Federal
Reserve and lower interest rates as major US banks kick off what
analysts expect to be the first quarter of contracting corporate
earnings since 2016.
On Friday JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo will post results to begin
the earnings season in
earnest. Citigroup and Goldman Sachs will
report the following Monday, followed by Bank of America and Morgan
Stanley on Tuesday.
In the wake of the Federal Reserve's cautious shift due to signs of
softness in the US economy and the subsequent drop in 10-year treasury
yields, S&P 500 banks are seen posting year-on-year first-quarter
earnings growth of 2.3%, down from 8.2% forecast six months ago,
according to Refinitiv data.
“The Fed pivoted so abruptly, which gives one pause about what
they're saying about the economy,” said Chuck Carlson, CEO at Horizon
Investment Services in Hammond, Indiana. “Flat to falling interest rates
are not good news for bank interest margins. It’s not surprising that
analysts are taking down earnings estimates.”
Slowdown jitters
The central bank’s change in tack put the brakes on what had been a
pattern of quarterly rate hikes, amid signs of slowing economic growth.
Slowdown jitters have also hit 10-year treasury yields. The benchmark
bond’s yield hit a 15-month low in the first quarter, flattening the
yield curve and narrowing the gap between the interest banks pay
depositors and the interest they charge consumers, which is bad news for
profits.
“That’s why the estimates are going down,” Carlson added. “Analysts
are fearful of interest margins for banks and there’s an underlying
concern about loan growth.”
In the first three months of the year, the S&P 500 bounced back
from a sell-off in December, gaining 13.1%, its biggest quarterly
increase since 2009. But financials underperformed the wider market,
gaining 7.9% in the quarter as the new low-interest-rate normal that
boosted other sectors was a headwind for banks.
Since October, analysts have drastically lowered their expectations
for S&P 500 earnings in 2019, with first-quarter estimates dropping
from 8.1% growth to a year-over-year decline of 2.2%. That would mark
the first quarter of negative growth since the earnings “recession” that
ended in 2016.
The partial federal government shutdown in January and an expected
drop in trading revenues provided additional impetus for analysts to cut
first-quarter bank earnings estimates. In a KBW note dated April 3,
lead analyst Brian Kleinhanzl sees median year-on-year revenues from
both equities and fixed income, currencies and commodities (FICC)
trading to have dropped by 15% in the quarter.
“Within financials, the industry that's been hit hardest is capital
markets,” said Tajinder Dhillon, senior research analyst at Refinitiv in
London. “Those downward revisions have intensified over the last 90
days. Of the big six banks, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan
have seen the biggest declines” in first-quarter earnings estimates.
But some analysts believe the effects on banks of a more
accommodative Fed and the flattened yield curve are overstated.
Oppenheimer lead analyst Chris Kotowski wrote in a March 25 note “to be
sure, rates and the yield curve have had an effect on bank earnings”.
But he called the impact from the Fed's decision “a minor one”, and
wrote that aside from these impacts, “bank fundamentals are remarkably
stable”.
Recent history shows that large US financial institutions have beat
analyst estimates at a higher rate than the broader market. In the eight
most recent quarters the six banks have beat earnings estimates 83.3%
of the time on average, compared with the S&P 500’s 75.4% average
beat rate.
Additionally, bank revenues surprised to the upside 79.2% of the
time, and S&P 500 company revenues came in ahead of analyst
estimates 68.3% of the time, per Refinitiv data. In today’s late-cycle
reality, however, it is not clear that banks can beat even lowered
expectations. Either way they should set the tone for what analysts
predict will be a rocky earnings period.
“Psychologically, these are bellwether companies that tend to drive
sentiment,” Dhillon said, suggesting that their quarterly reports are
proxy indicators of corporate earnings health. “Banks are up there.”
- Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment