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JPMorgan, Disney, Nvidia and TripAdvisor are part of Zacks Earnings Preview

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For Immediate Release

Chicago, IL – May 7, 2018 – Zacks.com releases the list of companies likely to issue earnings surprises. This week’s list includes JPMorgan (JPM - Free Report) , Disney (DIS - Free Report) , Nvidia (NVDA - Free Report) and TripAdvisor (TRIP - Free Report) .

Is the Earnings Picture Really That Strong?

The narrative about the Q1 earnings season is one of all-around strength. But you wouldn’t see evidence of this strength in the stock market’s recent performance. The major indexes haven’t done much since the start of the year and performance since this earnings season got underway has hardly budged.

The chart below shows the performance of the S&P 500 index and the Nasdaq Composite since the April 13th earnings release from JPMorgan (JPM - Free Report) .

We need to lean on uncertainty about trade, the evolving inflation picture and geopolitics to explain a big part of the lack of follow through in the market, but we can cite some chinks in the earnings armor as well.

We should keep in mind that while earnings have been very strong, a lot of that strength was already expected and didn’t surprise many in the market. The fact is that the earnings picture had been steadily improving since the second half of 2017 and in some respects the 2017 Q4 earnings season was actually a lot stronger than what we are seeing companies report this earnings season.

There has not been any incremental improvement in the earnings outlook relative to what was expected ahead of the start of this earnings season. We see this in the underwhelming revisions trend for the 2018 Q2 quarter, which is in contrast to the very positive revisions trend we saw ahead of the start of the Q4 earnings season.

A big part of the positive revisions we saw ahead of the start of the Q1 earnings season reflected the direct impact of the tax law changes, which was obviously a one-off development. Had all positive revisions been a result of tax law changes, we would have seen only EPS estimates go up, with no changes to revenue estimates. But that wasn’t the case, as revenue estimates had gone up as well, which raised our hopes that the aggregate revisions trend had finally turned positive after many years being in the other direction.

Disappointingly, we are not seeing that with estimates for Q2. In other words, market participants are justifiably skeptical about the magnitude and direction of marginal change in earnings expectations.

This skepticism likely gets reinforced by the recent uptrend in the exchange value of the U.S. dollar, which is now at its highest point this year on a trade-weighted basis. With about 40% of S&P 500 earnings coming from beyond the U.S. borders, this emerging strength in the U.S. dollar is a net negative for earnings outlook. Some folks are pointing to signs of softness in the global economic outlook, which undercuts the narrative of synchronized global growth that has been so central to the earnings turnaround.

As you can see, growth in Q1 is very strong. In fact, the Q1 earnings growth is the strongest in more than 7 years. But markets are forward-looking systems and while the growth picture in the current and coming quarters is pretty good, it isn’t getting any better. If anything uncertainty about the dollar and global growth represent a question mark over expectations for the coming periods.

Q1 Earnings Season Scorecard (as of Friday, May 4th)

Total earnings for the 409 S&P 500 members that have reported results already are up +24% from the same period last year on +9.3% higher revenues, with 78% beating EPS estimates and 75.6% beating revenue estimates. The proportion of companies beating both EPS and revenue estimates is 63.3%.

We have a busy reporting docket this week as well, with more than 850 companies reporting Q1 results, including 46 S&P 500 members. The notable reports this week include Disney (DIS - Free Report) , Nvidia (NVDA - Free Report) , TripAdvisor (TRIP - Free Report) and others.

Earnings and revenue growth rate and the proportion of positive EPS surprises is tracking above what we have been seeing from the same group of 409 index members. But revenue surprises are tracking modestly below the preceding earnings season, but remain above historical periods.

Tech Sector Scorecard

For the Tech sector, we now have Q1 results from 83.1% of the sector’s total market cap in the S&P 500 index. Total earnings for these Tech companies are up +29.6% from the same period last year on +12% higher revenues, with 90.9% beating EPS estimates and 93.2% beating revenue estimates.

Expectations for 2018 Q1 as a Whole

Looking at Q1 as a whole, combining the actual results that have come out with estimates for the still-to-come companies, total earnings for the S&P 500 index expected to be up +23.2% from the same period last year on +8.7% higher revenues. This would follow the +13.4% earnings growth on +8.1% revenue growth in the 2017 Q4 earnings season.

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