NEW YORK, April 5 (Reuters) - The U.S. stock market is
the most expensive it has been in around two years. Its
valuation could be put to the test as companies report earnings
in coming weeks.
The S&P 500 is up more than 9% year-to-date,
following its strongest first-quarter performance since 2019.
But the bar may be rising for stocks to keep advancing at that
pace, increasing pressure on companies to deliver strong
results.
The benchmark index trades at 20.7 times its estimated
earnings for the next 12 months, near a more than two-year high
of 21.2 hit in late March, according to LSEG Datastream.
Unremarkable earnings growth could give investors less reason to
hold onto stocks, at a time when elevated yields on Treasuries
bolster the attractiveness of bonds.
Investors will also listen for companies' views on the
economy and inflation, to gauge whether the so-called Goldilocks
environment of resilient growth and cooling consumer prices can
continue.
Signs of stubborn inflation have diminished expectations
in recent weeks for how deeply the Federal Reserve will cut
rates this year. Stocks rose after another
stronger-than-expected employment report on Friday.
"If we're going to continue to make significant gains in the
stock market, we have to not just meet, but probably exceed ...
what those estimates are for earnings," said Yung-Yu Ma, chief
investment officer at BMO Wealth Management.
Delta Air Lines ( DAL ), BlackRock ( BLK ), and JPMorgan
Chase & Co ( JPM ) are among the companies scheduled to release
their first quarter results next week. Investors will also be
watching for March U.S. consumer price data, expected on April
10.
Analysts expect to see earnings growth of 5% in the first
quarter, according to LSEG data. That would be the lowest since
the second quarter of 2023. They expect margins to be squeezed
by high interest rates, rising commodity costs, and falling
corporate pricing power due to slowing inflation. Earnings grew
by 10.1% in the fourth quarter of 2023.
The results of megacaps such as Nvidia ( NVDA ), Meta
Platforms ( META ) and Microsoft ( MSFT ) could be key for
investor sentiment, following a divergence in the share price
performance of the so-called Magnificent Seven stocks that led
markets higher last year.
Chipmaker Nvidia, for instance, is up 78% in 2024, while
Tesla shares have fallen over 30% due to concerns over
its margins and demand. The electric vehicle maker has canceled
the long-promised inexpensive car that investors have been
counting on to drive its growth into a mass-market automaker,
Reuters reported on Friday.
"These businesses now need to justify these high
valuations," said Bryant VanCronkhite, a portfolio manager at
Allspring Global Investments. "The market is looking for every
company to talk about their demand drivers and articulate what
they see coming ahead."
At the same time, investors will be watching whether
evidence of continuing strength in the U.S. economy flows
through to rising revenues and earnings for industrial, energy,
and other sectors that are closely tied to growth. Shares of
these companies have largely performed well this year in a rally
that has spread beyond technology and growth names.
"If the U.S. economy starts to bounce from here you want
exposure to industries with real economy end-markets," said
Justin Menne, head of US equities for Harbor Capital Advisors,
who is overweight shares of energy companies.
Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles
Schwab, said she expects "punishment" of companies that fail to
meet expectations.
"What will be critical beyond the beat rate will be the
margin stories," she said.
As always, the Fed will loom large in investors' minds. A
robust earnings season and expectations of growing price
pressures from companies could be seen as further evidence that
the economy is too strong for the central bank to cut rates
without risking an inflationary rebound.
March U.S. employment numbers backed up that narrative.
Nonfarm payrolls increased by 303,000 jobs last month, far above
expectations. Futures markets show investors expect the Fed to
deliver around 70 basis points of rate cuts this year, compared
to 150 basis points they had factored in January.
Yet weaker earnings could indicate cracks in the economy's
strength. Some investors believe that could boost the case for
the Fed to ease monetary policy.
"That bad news could actually be good news for the market
because it leads to those Fed rate cuts that everyone is hoping
for," said Kevin Mahn, chief investment officer at Hennion &
Walsh Asset Management.