Analysis-Europe Inc set to clear lower earnings bar; wait-and-see on China stimulus

By Samuel Indyk and Medha Singh

LONDON (Reuters) - Analysts have downgraded estimates for European corporate earnings at the fastest pace in seven months this week, setting a lower bar for beats, while more optimism over the global outlook might spare shares from severe punishment for misses.     

Third-quarter earnings are expected on average to have increased 3.7% from a year ago, according to data from LSEG I/B/E/S, driven by growth in materials, financials, and utilities. 

However, the ratio of downgrades to upgrades of analysts' European earnings estimates has reached its highest since February as the region's economy struggles to generate meaningful growth.

"Expectations have come down quite a bit, particularly with the economy weakening," said Frederique Carrier, head of investment strategy at RBC Wealth Management. 

"If numbers are better than expected, I would expect the market to react quite positively," Carrier said.

Quarterly results from European giants - French luxury groups LVMH on Tuesday and rival Christian Dior on Wednesday - push third-quarter earnings season into high gear this week.

In the second quarter, earnings misses were punished more than they had been historically. However, some analysts believe this quarter might be different, as investors turn more optimistic about the global growth outlook. 

"Investors are happy to look through the China weakness," said Georges Debbas, head of European equity & derivatives strategy at BNP Paribas (OTC:BNPQY ). 

China is a critical market for many European sectors and Beijing's recent announcements of large-scale stimulus measures, although light on details, have offered some hope that the world's second-largest economy can again drive global growth.

Finance Minister Lan Foan pledged over the weekend that Beijing would do more to stimulate economic growth, which data due on Friday is expected to confirm remained subdued in the third quarter.

The health of China's economy matters more for European companies that depend more on exports than their U.S. rivals, which generate most of their revenue in their vast home market.

But many investors say they remain cautious until they see further details about China's stimulus plans, including the size of the proposed package. 

"There will be hope that the stimulus package can be positive for companies that have suffered from weak consumption in China," said Josephine Cetti, chief strategist at Nordea. 

"(But) I don't think companies will change estimates based on what we've seen, because we haven't seen anything concrete yet."

RELATIVELY CHEAP  

Among consumer-facing industries hit especially hard by weakness in China are luxury retailers, such as LVMH and Kering (EPA:PRTP ), and automakers. 

Investors have been shunning Europe's auto sector because of softening volume growth and heightened competition from China, particularly in electric vehicles, despite valuations close to record lows compared to the benchmark STOXX 600 index.

"The auto sector for us has been uninvestable for years," said Eddie Kennedy, head of bespoke discretionary fund management at Marlborough, citing high capex spending, low margins and increased competition.  

More broadly, though, cheap valuations and light positioning offer opportunities for investors.

While the STOXX 600 is within 1.5% of record highs, European companies trade close to a record discount against their U.S. counterparts at about 37%, based on the price-to-earnings ratio. 

"Valuations are relatively attractive," said Ben Ritchie, head of developed markets equities at abrdn.

"I don't think we'll see anything in the third quarter that will change that picture."

Investor positioning in Europe is also broadly neutral according to most metrics. Citi strategists highlight that investors are slightly net short Eurostoxx futures, one of just three indexes from a number that they track that has a net short position against the backdrop of mostly bullish equity positioning. 



"It's not like S&P 500 , which is trading at extremely high valuations, extremely high positioning, extremely high overcrowdedness that if a big AI scare happens, you could see a large correction," BNP Paribas's Debbas said about the STOXX 600. 

"In Europe, I don't think that's going to be the case."

Source: Investing.com

Publicații recente
Amazon doubles down on AI startup Anthropic with another $4 billion
23.11.2024 - 11:00
Dollar climbs, euro weakens to two-year low after PMI data
23.11.2024 - 11:00
Dollar keeps rising; euro falls to two-year low on weak data
22.11.2024 - 12:00
Asian FX muted as dollar remains at 1-yr high; yen steady as inflation rises
22.11.2024 - 07:00
Dollar rises after claims data, bitcoin continues rally
21.11.2024 - 22:00
STOXX 600 snaps four-day losing streak on energy, tech boost
21.11.2024 - 19:00
Deere's profit beat overshadows tepid 2025 outlook, shares rise
21.11.2024 - 19:00
Dollar rises after claims data, bitcoin climb continues
21.11.2024 - 18:00
Deere forecasts weak annual profit as farm incomes sag
21.11.2024 - 15:00
US indictments scythe $27 billion off value of India's Adani Group firms
21.11.2024 - 13:00
Deere forecasts annual profit below estimates as farm equipment demand slumps
21.11.2024 - 13:00
Sterling sags as 'Trump bump' lifts dollar
21.11.2024 - 13:00
STOXX 600 drops for fifth day, Nvidia drags European chip stocks
21.11.2024 - 12:00
Dollar steady near recent highs; euro suffers more weakness
21.11.2024 - 12:00
US indictments scythe $34 billion from value of India's Adani Group firms
21.11.2024 - 11:00

© Analytic DC. All Rights Reserved.

new
Analiza pieței Cum va afecta raportul NFP de mâine cursul de schimb al dolarului american?