Posts Tagged ‘investing’

Q1 Earnings Down 35% Year over Year – Bull Market?

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

With over 50% of companies earnings reported so far, earnings appear about 35% lower (of the S&P 500 included stocks) than last year’s same period. At the beginning of the year, analyst only expected 12.5% lower. Even with earnings so much lower than forecasted at the beginning of the year, expectations where reduced so dramatically over the quarter that that over two thirds of earnings have exceeded estimates so far.


Healthcare seems to have held off the impact of the recession with a 2.2% average growth over last year. Consumer discretionary companies have felt the most dramatic effect with an average earnings decline of 96.8% over last year. Interesting though how the Healthcare Sector Spider ETF (XLV) is down -8.66% this year and the Consumer Discretionary Sector Spider ETF (XLY) is up 5.27% for the year.

Although expectations where clearly lowered in the first quarter, the second quarter remains largely unchanged. Earnings are expected to be down 20% year over year in the second quarter and just a 4% drop in the third.

Wall Street seems to be either too pessimistic or overly optimistic. So the question is whether the future estimates are overly optimistic of too pessimistic? If Wall Street is ends up being too optimistic then we will likely retest the lows of early March 2009. If Wall Street turns out to be too pessimistic then we may have more to gain. The question is do you think earnings next quarter only declined 20% over last year’s same period?

The Fortune Telling Stock Market

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

The stock market is typically 5 or 6 months ahead of the economy. That is what we are led to believe; actually many bear market rallies are predicated on this theory. Does it really?

We heard the declared bottom ring in November 2008 when the Dow Industrial Average hit 7552. So according to the Stock Market fortune teller the Dow Industrial Average should not have broken the 7552 level in February and economy should be on the rise by now. Unfortunately this prediction has been proved wrong this time.

One thing is for sure; eventually it will be right (assuming you believe the World’s economies will recover at one point, I do). One of the eventual lows will be preceded by growth.

Sounds kind of like a convenient statistic, where they fail to disclose the accuracy. Over the past year, how many times have you heard “bottom”, how many times has this fortune telling ability been right?

Lately the fortune telling ability of the stock market has been the reason “you can’t afford not to be in this market” according to the mass populous on Wall Street. It may eventually be true, but can you afford its accuracy?

The Wall Street Alchemist –Analysts

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

What job other than a Wall Street Analyst can you be wrong so often and still command such respect? Meteorologist?

Everyday new data is released to the market that can dramatically affect the market action for that day or even several days. This data alone would be less of an impact if where not for the analysts’ estimates that are either met, beaten or missed.


The market interoperates a miss as things are worse than expected. When the data beats the analysts numbers the market views things better than once thought. Lastly when the number is right on, we are status quo.

My question is how we can take the “educated guess” from a small group of people and determine whether the data released is positive, negative or status quo. Most analysts work for the investment community directly, so are their estimates driven by an agenda. These “educated guesses” somehow have become benchmarks. Lately these guesses have moved markets dramatically in short periods of time to the upside and downside.

Are these estimates for professional traders or investors? Should brokerage firms be able to release estimates, since they can have such an impact on the short term markets? Why do the markets seem to trade a step ahead of the news, is it because they set the benchmarks?