JPMorgan
analyzed 25,000 transcripts and found these 5 market trends in Q4 2018 .... Now in Q2 2019 check out where Are We?
JPMorgan’s
U.S. equity strategy team used text-mining tools to analyze more than 25,000
S&P 500 companies’ earnings transcripts, conference calls and Q&A
sessions over the past couple of years and unearthed five key themes in Q4 of
2018.
1)
Tariffs are still a concern
While U.S. companies continue to fear the
uncertainty surrounding tariffs and the U.S.-China trade war, there’s been a
decrease in mentions during Q&A sessions, signaling that some companies are
better positioning themselves against any trade-related impact, according to
J.P.Morgan strategist Dubravko Lakos-Bujas.
At
the industry level, there has been an uptick among Tech Hardware, Household
& Personal Products, Retailing, Capital Goods, and Autos. On the contrary,
Materials, Food & Beverage, and Consumer Durables have seen a noticeable
decline,” he wrote in a note to clients on Sunday.
However,
there was an uptick in tariff-related concerns from the retail, auto, tech and
personal products industries, while there was a decline in mentions from the
materials, food and consumer durables industries.
They
are managing tariffs by raising prices where possible, idling and shifting
production to geographies unaffected by tariffs, and/or passing cost to
suppliers,” Lakos-Bujas explained. “If a trade deal materializes, it will
remove uncertainty and could be a source of positive revisions since this
catalyst is mostly not in consensus numbers.”
2)
Input costs weigh on trade-sensitive industries
Input costs were a key theme
among U.S. corporations as a whole, but there was a noticeable shift from
commodities-related concerns to trade-related costs, according to Lakos-Bujas.
Trade-sensitive industries such as retail and autos expressed the most concern
over increasing input costs.
With
commodity prices rising sharply [year to date], input cost concerns could
resurface in the coming quarters, especially for [Consumer] Staples,”
Lakos-Bujas wrote.
3)
Rising wages are bad for some sectors
Though many market watchers
believe rising wages remain a significant headwind for major U.S. companies,
fewer S&P 500 corporations have cited higher wages as a notable risk. On
one hand, labor-intensive sectors such as consumer discretionary and real
estate are concerned about rising labor costs that come with a tightening labor
market. However, tech, health care and financials did not discuss rising wages
as much of a concern in their company reports.
Since
the latter makes up ~60% of S&P 500 market cap (and growing), the expanding
labor market should be a net positive for S&P 500 profits through rising
demand/revenue, which should more than offset wage pressures at this point in
the cycle,” Lakos-Bujas said.
4)
Geopolitical risks at 5-year high
Energy, tech, transportation and banks most
often mentioned concerns about the current geopolitical landscape. According to
Lakos-Bujas’ research, energy companies noted that sentiment surrounding crude
oil’s supply and demand was negatively impacted by geopolitics.
Additionally,
energy companies also blamed the partial U.S. government shutdown for delays in
regulatory approvals.
Lakos-Bujas
added that tech hardware companies are increasingly concerned about
geopolitical risks heading into the first quarter of 2019, including Brexit,
U.S.-China relations, unrest in emerging markets.
And
banks, Lakos-Bujas noted, “acknowledged still high geopolitical risks impacting
the global economic growth outlook and reduced client activity.”
5)
Strong U.S. dollar a headwind
Currency headwinds remained a key concern
among automakers, food & beverage and materials companies. Meanwhile within
tech, the companies noted that a strong U.S. dollar created some issues within
emerging markets. However, if the dollar stabilizes or weakens, “this
multi-year drag for US Multinationals could become a tailwind,” Lakos-Bujas
said.
Happy Investing
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