2Q Corporate Results: 2% Earnings Growth Expected in 2019

Summary: Overall, corporate results in the second quarter of 2019 were fine, but growth has slowed. Sales and earnings were up were 5% and 4% yoy, respectively. Margins rebounded from the end of 2018 but are still below the cycle high made in 3Q18.

Looking ahead, analysts' expectations for 10% earnings growth in 2019 have been revised down to just 2%. This estimate will be about right if margins can be maintained at the current level and the dollar doesn't further appreciate, but another drop in oil prices could cause earnings growth to decline towards zero.

For 2020, analysts currently expect growth of 5% to sales and 11% to earnings. This is too optimistic. Assuming no change in the dollar, oil and margins, earnings growth is likely to be halved. Margin compression (likely) would lower growth much more.

Valuations are now back to their 25-year average. They are not cheap, but if investors once again become ebullient, there is room for valuations to expand. With earnings growth likely to be negligible, the key for share price appreciation in 2019 (and 2020) is likely to hinge almost entirely on valuations expanding.

93% of the companies in the S&P 500 have released their second quarter (2Q19) financial reports. The headline numbers were fine, but growth has slowed. Here are the details:

Sales

Quarterly sales grew 5% over the past year, to a new all-time high (ATH). On a trailing 12-month basis (TTM), sales were 7% higher yoy (all financial data in this post is from S&P). Enlarge any image by clicking on it.



The arrows in the chart above and those that follow indicate the period from 2Q14 to 1Q16 when oil prices fell 70% and the US experienced an "earnings recession." The negative affect on overall S&P sales (above) and the energy sector alone (below) is easy to spot.



The six sectors with the highest weighting in the S&P grew an average of 8% in the past year (box in middle column) and, since the peak in oil in 2Q14, their sales have grown an average of 39%. In contrast, energy sector sales have declined 29% (far right column).

Excluding the volatile energy sector, sales for the remainder of the S&P have continued to trend higher at about the same rate over the past 9 years (blue line; from Yardeni).