Tariff Two-Step: What to Watch as Earnings Begin

U.S. companies—hit by President Trump's tariffs and then by a 90-day delay excluding China just ahead of reporting earnings season—are maneuvering to explain changing circumstances as they announce earnings. While the timing was inconvenient for corporations, it's helpful for investors, who now get a first glance at how firms plan to react in a situation that remains uncertain even after most countries got an extension Wednesday. But investors should stay alert for what could be novel moves by many companies.

On Monday, for instance, Levi Strauss (LEVI) reported results and kept revenue and earnings guidance unchanged for fiscal 2025. However, the company said its guidance "does not reflect any impact from the recently announced tariffs." In other words, because the company doesn't know how tariffs will play out, it didn't try to codify the business impact.

"Obviously the news on tariffs is very new" said CEO Michelle Gass, in a transcript of Levi's call with analysts. "It's fluid. We, like the rest of the industry, are getting our arms around it."

Other companies might follow Levi's lead in giving guidance that leaves out tariff impacts. If so, investors would still receive outlooks from many firms, but with more vagueness. While guidance is never set in stone, it appears this time around investors might want to take company outlooks even less literally than in the past.

This matters to investors trying to price individual companies but also could affect overall market clarity. Wall Street analysts partly rely on company input to estimate future revenue, margin, and other metrics. If they don't have the full picture, it will make their estimates less reliable. Analysts' estimates are compiled and averaged out across the market, so vagueness in guidance would mean less insight into future S&P 500 earnings. This could create more uncertainty and volatility.

"Given the high uncertainty around the potential impact of the shift in global trade policy and, by extension, to the global economy, it wouldn't be surprising to me to see companies either refrain from issuing guidance, or even drop previously issued guidance, similar to what was observed around the start of the pandemic," said Nathan Peterson, director of derivatives analysis at the Schwab Center for Financial Research.

Guidance or lack thereof could also tell investors more about where companies stand. "Those companies that that offer up healthy guidance might indicate that they're relatively immune to the impact of tariffs," Peterson said.