Q2 ’23 earnings for the SP 500 starts in about 3 – 4 weeks, and will start with the financial sector kicking things off for Q2 ’23.
Here’s a quick look at expected SP 500 revenue and EPS growth by sector:
Expected y.y revenue growth by sector:
- Financials: +7.4% expected on June 16th vs +7.5% on May 26th ’23:
- Consumer Disc: +6.4% expected on June 16th, versus +6.3% on May 26th ’23;
- Real Estate: +3.7% expected June 16th, vs +3.7% on May 26th, ’23;
- Communication Serv: +2.8% expected on June 16th ’23, vs +2.8% on May 26th ’23;
- Cons Staples: +2.6% expected on June 16th vs +2.6% on May 26th ’23;
- Health Care: +2.6% expected on June 16th ’23, vs +2.6% on May 26th ’23;
- Industrials: +2.4% on June 16th vs +2.3% on May 26th ’23;
- Technology: -1.7% on June 16th, vs -1.7% on May 26th ’23;
- Utilities: -2.1% onĀ June 16th vs -0.9% on May 26th ’23;
- Basic Materials: -8.2% on June 16th vs -7.6% on May 26th ’23;
- Energy: -24.9% on June 16th, vs -24.3% on May 26th ’23;
- SP 500 revenue growth: -0.6% expected on June 16th, versus -0.5% on May 26th ’23;
Expected y.y EPS growth by sector:
- Consumer Disc: expected 26% on June 16th, vs +25.2% expected on May 26th;
- Financials: +9.7% on June 16th vs +10.7% expected on May 26th;
- Communication Serv: expected +9.3% on June 16th vs an expected 95% on May 26th;
- Industrials: expected +6.2% on June 16th vs an expected +5.9% on May 26th;
- Utilities: +2.8% expected on June 16th vs +0.3% expected on May 26th;
- Cons Staples: +1.8% expected on June 16th, vs +2.6% expected on May 26th;
- Technology: -3.3% expected on June 16th, vs -3.9% expected on May 26th;
- Real estate: -4.9% expected on June 16th, vs -4.8% expected on May 26th;
- Health Care: -15.7% expected as of June 16th vs -15.5% expected on May 26th;
- Basic Materials: -27.4% expected on June 16th, vs -27.2% expected on May 26th;
- Energy: -44.4% expected on June 16th, vs the -43.2% expected on May 26th;
- SP 500 EPS growth: expected -5.6% on June 16th, vs -5.4% expected on May 26th;
A deeper dive on the stats: The bigger issue is the 2nd quarter every year since 2020, when Q2 ’20 was the worst of the Covid lockdowns. That’s presented a problem for year-over-year (y.y) compares since Q2 ’20 was so bad. Here’s the look at second quarter results in aggregate, starting with 2020:
- Q2 ’20: SP 500 revenue fell -8.7% while SP 500 EPS fell -30.6%;
- Q2 ’21: SP 500 revenue rose +25.2%, while SP 500 EPS rose +96%;
- Q2 ’22: SP 500 revenue rose +13.6%, while SP 500 EPS rose 8.4%;
- Q2 ’23: (expected): SP 500 revenue -0.6%, SP 500 EPS -5.6%;
By sector here’s a few thoughts to ponder:
Financials: expected EPS and revenue growth, holding up very well despite the SVB issues. Remember though JP Morgan and the bigger banks count for a far bigger “earnings weight” than the regionals. From a “move the needle” perspective on SP 500 EPS, regionals account for a very little. Until the yield curve starts to normalize in terms of it’s slope, financials will probably underperform, but relative to the rest of the 10 sectors within the SP 500, the numbers aren’t bad.
Health Care: Been negative all year, and UNH last week confirmed the poor EPS projections. TJ Dhillon of Refinitiv confirmed to me last week that UNH’s earnings weight in the SP 500 was +1.2%, now exactly in line with it’s market cap weight of 1.2% per Morningstar data.
Commodity sectors: Energy one year ago was the star and now readers can see how it’s at the bottom of expected SP 500 EPS and revenue growth. Basic Materials too.
Technology: given the tech sectors returns YTD, bet you didn’t expected to see negative EPS and revenue growth expected for the tech sector in Q2 ’23.
This blog tracks all of the EPS and revenue growth data by sector going back to just after 2008.
In Q1 ’23, revenue was expected to fall 5%, instead upside surprises have nearly brought it flat y.y so expected -0.6% revenue growth for Q2 ’23, should ultimately see +2% – 3% revenue growth, with slightly softer upside surprises.
Take all of this data with a grain of salt and some healthy skepticism. It’s just one quarter’s data and it’s mostly sourced from IBES data by Refinitiv. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. None of this data may be updated and if it is updated, may not be updated in a timely fashion. This data changes daily too. It’s also one person’s opinion and none of it represents advice. Each reader should measure your own appetite for volatility.
Thanks for reading.