Home Business Big Tech added to a shrinking forecast, but maybe Bob Iger can brighten the mood

Big Tech added to a shrinking forecast, but maybe Bob Iger can brighten the mood

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Big Tech added to a shrinking forecast, but maybe Bob Iger can brighten the mood

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Wall Street’s expectations for 2023 have been diving as forecasts for the new year come in light, and the news could get worse once they factor in disappointing results from Big Tech. But at least Bob Iger is coming back for a sequel.

Google, Facebook, Amazon and Apple all disappointed with holiday earnings this week. Their forecasts ranged from nonexistent to piecemeal to meh, and the fallout will only add to the biggest dive in Wall Street’s expectations through the beginning of a year since 2016.

Analysts’ average forecast for 2023 earnings from the S&P 500 index
SPX
dropped by 2.5% in January, according to FactSet Senior Earnings Analyst John Butters, the worst in seven years. Those projections began heading lower last year, and the decline is only steepening — analysts are now projecting 3% earnings growth in 2023, and that is contingent on a big holiday rebound from the results being released this quarter.


Uncredited

The news was even worse for the first quarter, for which projections declined 3.3% in January as companies whiffed on their forecasts at a rapid pace: 86% of the 43 companies that have guided for first-quarter earnings have missed projections, Butters reported. Earnings are now expected to decline 4.2%, which would be the first year-over-year earnings decline since the third quarter of 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic write-offs started to come in.

Big Tech only added to the downward trajectory in recent days. Amazon.com Inc.
AMZN
missed on its holiday earnings as well as its forecast for the first quarter, and that company could determine if S&P 500 profits rise in 2023 all on its own. Amazon’s worst holiday earnings since 2014 could also contribute to the consumer discretionary sector’s first earnings decline since the beginning of the pandemic, with holiday sector earnings now expected to drop more than 5%.

Google parent Alphabet Inc.
GOOGL
GOOG
and Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc.
META
also missed their respective earnings targets amid problems with the digital-advertising industry, leading to the communications-services sector having the worst earnings season in the S&P 500. Profit has declined 25.2% in that sector so far, the worst among the 11 S&P 500 sectors, but would be down just 6.5% without the effects of Meta and Alphabet, Butters reported.

Apple Inc.
AAPL
also didn’t do projections any favors, reporting its biggest sales decrease since 2016 and an earnings miss Thursday afternoon. In a piecemeal forecast, executives projected a similar sales decline in the calendar first quarter, though unofficially.

This week in earnings

After the busiest week in earnings season wrapped up, don’t expect much of a breather — 95 S&P 500 companies are expected to report in the week ahead, the third consecutive week with at least 90 companies reporting. There will be plenty of intrigue among companies not in the S&P 500 too, including Robinhood Markets Inc.
HOOD
and Affirm Holdings Inc.
AFRM
reporting together on Wednesday afternoon.

Only one Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA
stock will report, but that is the Wednesday call you will want to tune in for: Bob Iger’s return to the Walt Disney Co.
DIS
earnings show.

The calls to put on your calendar
The numbers to watch
  • Food prices: Groceries, prepared foods and even snacks have seen higher prices in waves of inflation, and executives will give clues about their plans for pricing going forward nearly every day of the week: Tyson Foods Inc.
    TSN
    on Monday, Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc.
    CMG
    on Tuesday, Yum Brands Inc.
    YUM
    on Wednesday and wrapping up with PepsiCo Inc.
    PEP,
    Kellogg Co.
    K
    and Flowers Foods Inc.
    FLO
    on Thursday. Listen out for some of the phrases they used to suggest they could still raise prices if they wanted to last season: “pricing power,” “strong pricing” or “price realization.”

  • Ride-hailing prices and demand: In their most recent results, Lyft Inc.
    LYFT
    disappointed with its number of rides, but showed much higher revenue per ride, while Uber Technologies Inc.
    UBER
    rides increased 19% as gross bookings ran up 45% on a constant-currency basis. Both of those suggest rising prices, which could affect demand that has been steadily growing in the third year of the COVID-19 pandemic. Compare bookings and revenue growth with riders and rides growths when Uber reports Wednesday morning and Lyft on Thursday afternoon. Read more: Food prices keep rising. Food-company execs are betting Americans will keep paying.

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