Featured Image

What Factors Have S&P 500 Companies Concerned in Q3?

Earnings

By John Butters  |  October 10, 2016

While the majority of S&P 500 companies will report earnings results for Q3 2016 over the next few weeks, 5% of the companies in the index (25 companies) have already reported for the third quarter. Given the number of concerns in the market, have these companies discussed specific factors that had a negative impact on earnings or revenues for the third quarter during their earnings conference calls?

To answer this question, FactSet searched for specific terms related to a number of factors (i.e. “currency,” “China,” etc.) in the conference call transcripts of the S&P 500 companies that have already conducted third quarter earnings conference calls through October 7. FactSet then looked to see if the company cited a negative impact, expressed a negative sentiment (i.e. “volatility,” “uncertainty,” “pressure,” “headwind,” etc.), or discussed clear underperformance in relation to the factor for either the quarter just reported or in guidance for future quarters. The results are shown below.


Similar to previous quarters, the stronger US dollar has been cited by the most companies (15) to date in the index as a factor that either had a negative impact on earnings or revenues for Q3, or is expected to have a negative impact on earnings and revenues in future quarters. These companies cited Canada (three), Mexico (three), UK (two), Brazil (one), and Korea (one) for having currencies that weakened relative to the US dollar in Q3 2016.

It is interesting to note that three of these 25 companies expressed a negative sentiment regarding the upcoming US election for president.

Election Uncertainty

The presidential election received three mentions in the conference earnings calls that have happened so far. Here are some relative excerpts discussing the potential ramifications of the election:

“I think there is just great uncertainty as to what's going to happen in the US in particular as a result of the outcome of the election. It goes without saying that people are sort of trying to decide who to choose and what the impact will be on the economy, and I think people are maybe just hunkering down a little bit...And I think once we get through the election and then that uncertainty is removed, hopefully the market will find some momentum.” –Yum! Brands (October 6)

“This year's presidential election in the US and events such as UK's referendum vote to exit the European Union continue to create uncertainty and volatility. This uncertainty and volatility always has the potential to affect consumer and business sentiment, which in turn could negatively impact global economic activity.” –Acuity Brands (October 5)

“Also, we've anticipated a bit of an election slowdown. And historically, there's always been a little fall off in booking volumes around election time. And so there could be some of that.” –Carnival (September 26)

 

John Butters

Vice President, Senior Earnings Analyst

Mr. John Butters is Vice President and Senior Earnings Analyst at FactSet. His weekly research report, “Earnings Insight,” provides analysis and commentary on trends in corporate earnings data for the S&P 500 including revisions to estimates, year-over-year growth, performance relative to expectations, and valuations. He is a widely used source for the media and has appeared on CNBC, Fox Business News, and the Business News Network. In addition, he has been cited by numerous print and online publications such as The Wall Street Journal, The Financial Times, The New York Times, MarketWatch, and Yahoo! Finance. Mr. Butters has over 15 years of experience in the financial services industry. Prior to FactSet in January 2011, he worked for more than 10 years at Thomson Reuters (Thomson Financial), most recently as Director of U.S. Earnings Research (2007-2010).

Comments

The information contained in this article is not investment advice. FactSet does not endorse or recommend any investments and assumes no liability for any consequence relating directly or indirectly to any action or inaction taken based on the information contained in this article.