By Wallace Witkowski, MarketWatch
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Investors will be able to focus
on corporate fundamentals as third-quarter earnings season enters
its peak week without the distractions of a government shutdown or
pending U.S. debt default.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI), the S&P 500 Index
(SPX), and the Nasdaq Composite Index (RIXF) all finished with
gains for the week that saw an end to the 16-day partial government
shutdown. The government is funded until Jan. 15 and the debt
ceiling has been raised until Feb. 7 while lawmakers try to hash
out a budget deal. The Dow industrials closed the week up 1.1%, the
Nasdaq gained 3.2%, and the S&P 500 finished the week up 2.4%
for another record closing high of 1,744.50.
Now that the can has been kicked down the road into 2014 in
Washington, D.C., one of the three things that will get investors'
undivided attention in the coming week will be third-quarter
earnings.
"As is usually the case, earnings are in focus and next week
sees the bulk of reports being released," said Dan Greenhaus, chief
global strategist at BTIG. "This will help set the tone for the
remainder of the year since macro stories have generally been
pushed aside until 2014."
The coming week is considered the peak week of earnings season
with about 30% of the S&P 500 reporting, and 10 Dow components
posting quarterly results.
While the big banks and financial firms have already reported
earnings, Greenhaus noted this week will see the largest number of
financial sector firms reporting than any other week. More than 20
S&P 500 financial sector companies report including several
insurers such as Dow component Travelers Cos.(TRV), a number of
real-estate investment trusts such as Simon Properties Group Inc.
(SPG), capital markets firms such as Franklin Resources Inc. (BEN)
and State Street Corp. (STT), as well as exchange operator Nasdaq
OMX Group Inc. (NDAQ)
Other areas to focus on are industrials and tech, Greenhaus
said. Several industrial Dow components report such as United
Technologies Corp. (UTX) on Tuesday, Boeing Co. (BA) and
Caterpillar Inc. (CAT) on Wednesday, and 3M Co. (MMM) on Thursday.
Also on Thursday after the close, Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) reports
results.
Probably the closest watched corporate metric coming out of
earnings this week will be revenue growth, given the quarter's
generally weak sales results.
"Sales growth is doing okay versus one year ago but less so
against consensus," Greenhaus said. "Next week should help shed
additional light on the sales picture."
Of the 93 S&P 500 companies that have reported so far, only
53% have topped Wall Street consensus revenue estimates, compared
with a four-year average of 59%, according to John Butters, senior
earnings analyst at FactSet. But the below-average results aren't
just limited to revenue. Earnings are also running light. Of the
companies that have reported so far, 69% have topped the earnings
consensus, compared with a four-year average of 73%, Butters
said.
Expect corporate outlooks and commentary to trump actual
third-quarter results because of the amount of uncertainty recent
political wrangling has thrown into the economy said Paul Nolte,
managing director at Dearborn Partners in Chicago.
"What we're looking for is some consistency in general, the
consensus that the economy will continue to bump along at 2% to
2.5% GDP," Nolte said.
So far, that's not looking that great. To date, of the 18
S&P 500 companies that have provided a fourth-quarter earnings
outlook, 14 of the outlooks have been below consensus, a rate of
78% compared with the five-year average rate of 63%, Butters
said.
Other earnings highlights in the coming week include Dow
components McDonald's Corp. (MCD), DuPont (DD), AT&T Inc. (T),
and Procter & Gamble Co. (PG). Notable S&P 500 companies
include Halliburton Co.(HAL), Netflix Inc.(NFLX) , Amgen Inc.(AMGN)
, TripAdvisor Inc.(TRIP) , Amazon.com Inc.(AMZN) ,
Colgate-Palmolive Co.(CL) , Ford Motor Co.(F) , Dow Chemical
Co.(DOW) , and United Parcel Service Inc.(UPS)
In a recent note, Goldman Sachs highlighted 20 companies
(excluding financials and utilities) it sees as top contributors to
revenue growth for the third quarter. Of those companies,
Amazon.com, WellPoint Inc.(WLP) , McKesson Corp.(MCK), Boeing,
Microsoft, Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc.(FCX) , and
United Technologies report in the coming week.
What about the data?
With the federal government fully open, the Labor Department
said it will release the delayed September jobs report on Tuesday.
Other data set to come out include September existing home sales on
Monday, jobless claims on Thursday, and the University of Michigan
consumer sentiment index for October on Friday. Tentatively
scheduled are September new home sales for Thursday and September
durable goods orders on Friday.
That data, however, may be treated with some skepticism due to
the government shutdown. With the threatened shutdown in September
and the actual shutdown in October, "the economy wasn't functioning
properly," Dearborn's Nolte said.
"I think data will get discounted," Nolte said. "We won't get
clean data until December."
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