Quarterly Outlook
Macro Outlook: The US rate cut cycle has begun
Peter Garnry
Chief Investment Strategist
Chief Investment Strategist
Summary: This will be earnings week that defines the Q3 earnings season and our tilt is still leaning towards an upside surprise overall for Q3 earnings, but the latest earnings misses from Intel and SAP driven by weaker cloud business suggest potential earnings misses from Microsoft, Amazon and Google this week. Snap's latest results were strong suggesting an overall strong quarter for both Google and Facebook in online advertising although the smaller advertising platforms are taking market share.
More than 1,500 companies the global equity market with a market value above $1bn report earnings this week. These companies represent $29trn in market value which is around 54% of the market value in the MSCI World All-Country Index which represents equities in the developed and emerging markets. To say it the least, this is the week that will define the state of global corporate earnings in Q3, and its expected trajectory in the quarters to come. It will be an exciting lead into the US presidential election on Tuesday where Americans will vote about their future amid probably the greatest uncertainty in more than decade across politics and economics.
The earnings beats have been numerous across both US and European earnings suggesting too pessimistic analysts, but earnings beats have generally not been rewarded by the market in a sign that the market was ahead of consensus estimates. Companies that have missed on the other hand have been punished hard by the market adding to the great divergence in equity market performance we have observed this year.
Will big US tech disappoint on weaker cloud business?
This week’s earnings will be dominated of course by the big US technology companies such as Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, Google, and Facebook representing around $8trn in market value and the main thrust for global equity markets since 2010. The main question that comes to mind is whether we will see earnings misses from Microsoft, Amazon and Google driven by a weaker cloud business. Last week Intel disappointed on earnings driven by weaker cloud business and today SAP in Europe cut its FY20 forecast due to weaker cloud demand. Maybe the economic confidence lingering in the US and Europe due to higher Covid-19 cases and new restrictions are finally hitting the cloud business or decisions to move to the cloud. One thing is for sure, the recent earnings release from Snap suggest very strong online advertising markets which should benefit Facebook and Google.
Microsoft (Tuesday): PC sales have been strong with obvious tailwinds coming from mobility restrictions due to Covid-19 which should bode well for OS and Office revenue. Logitech’s recent earnings also suggest strong quarter for gaming which should underpin Microsoft earnings. We are a bit less optimistic on the cloud business given the warnings from Intel and SAP. Analysts are expected revenue at $35.8bn up 8% y/y and EPS at $1.55 up 12% y/y.
Apple (Thursday): earnings are likely to be strong driven by strong replacement cycle of iPhones and which could accelerate in the current fiscal quarter due to the launch of the iPhone 12. The Services segment is expected to post yet another strong quarter. Finally, the Wearables segment could continue to surprise analysts and add to the potential earnings beat. Analysts expect revenue of $63.6bn down 1% y/y and EPS of $0.70 down 8% y/y.
Amazon (Thursday): the big question about Amazon in Q3 is to which extent that consumer behaviour has continued to shift spending online vs offline. One potential headwind for Q3 revenue was Amazon’s decision to move Prime Day to Q4. Analysts remain positive on AWS (the cloud business) despite the Q2 miss, but with the misses from Intel and SAP driven by weaker clous business, Amazon could make a negative surprise driven by yet another cloud miss. If it happens questions over the future growth rate of cloud business will most likely be the central headline from Q3 earnings season. Analysts expect revenue of $92.6bn up 32% y/y and EPS of $11.01 up 160% y/y.
Google (Thursday): the Covid-19 impact was initially thought to be very negative for advertisers including Google, but it turned out to be a blessing with more companies than ever ramping up online advertisers as consumers moved deeper into the realm of online. Snap’s recent earnings suggest strong online advertising which should benefit Google as well, but Snap’s result also highlighted an interesting new frontier in online advertising. The smaller advertising platforms such as Twitter, Pinterest and Snap are taking market share from Google and Facebook. The big uncertainty is the cloud business as we have touched on in our Microsoft preview. Finally, analysts will likely ask many questions about the recent antitrust case filed by the US government against Google.
Facebook (Thursday): It is the same story as Google on online advertising driven by strong mobile advertising across all Facebook’s different platforms. Instagram monetization is likely to continue being a strong catalyst for revenue growth. Key focus for investors will be cost control, outlook for advertising markets and finally any colour related to US elections and technology regulation given the US government antitrust case against Google which puts Facebook in a potential future grim situation.
The table below shows the 30 largest companies on market value reporting earnings this week.
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