Earnings To Bring Tailwinds For S&P 500, But Recovery Unlikely Until Fed Pivots

 | Oct 14, 2022 10:00

  • Earnings season may help to give the S&P 500 a much-needed boost from oversold levels.
  • However, monetary policy will continue to be the biggest head for the equity market
  • Tighter monetary policy will stand in the way of any long-term rally
  • It is now the fourth quarter of what has been a horrible year for stocks, with the S&P 500 down about 25%. While the market is again at an oversold point, earnings season is about to kick off, with the potential to deliver a short-term rebound that may be welcomed but is unlikely to last.

    The most challenging issue facing the market for the rest of the year and probably for the first half of next year will continue to be the path of monetary policy. The decline in the Fed’s balance sheet amid tightening financial conditions has been the story of 2022 and is likely to be the story for at least the first quarter of 2023.

    h2 Strong Nominal Growth Lifting Revenue /h2

    The market will likely see a decent bounce in the coming weeks as earning season rolls around. Earnings estimates overall are on the decline, but one shouldn’t be surprised if they come in better than expected. 

    One reason is that sales estimates for the S&P 500 remain strong and are still trending higher. Sales estimates are a function of nominal economic growth, not real economic growth, and should be thought about in nominal terms.

    It is why sales estimates have not only held up but increased after two consecutive quarters of negative real GDP growth. Because over the same time, as real GDP has fallen, nominal GDP has continued to rise, and sales estimates are just following nominal GDP higher. So as companies report results this quarter, it would not be surprising to see numbers come in stronger than estimates, especially on the revenue side of the equation.