Chart Of The Day: Why Apple Earnings Could Beat Expectations Yet Cause Sell Off

 | Jan 24, 2022 14:32

Tech behemoth Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) is scheduled to report Q1 2022 earnings on Thursday, Jan. 27 after the US market close. Expectations are for EPS of $1.89, up from $1.68 for the same quarter a year ago. Revenue is seen to be $118.68 billion, a jump from the $111.44 billion posted during last year's corresponding quarter.

The Cupertino, California-based company beat on both numbers last year; analysts predict that the iPhone maker will beat consensus expectations again this quarter.

Still, even if it beats, Apple's stock could sell off anyway. Investors are jettisoning technology shares, which represent growth stocks and currently possess the highest, most frothy valuations. What's happening across the broader equity market right now is bigger than Apple—the world's largest company based on its market cap of $2.652 trillion. 

Traders are now pricing in a 25-basis point Fed rate hike in March, which would make money more expensive, increasing the difficulty of justifying overstretched tech valuations. As investors rotate into cheaper cyclicals and out of tech, being the biggest mega cap tech company could turn into a liability.

Indeed, last week, the NASDAQ lost 7.6%, lagging peer US major indices, which all suffered their worst weekly performance in months. 

On the other hand, Apple's earnings report takes place after the conclusion on Wednesday of this month's Federal Reserve meeting. Should upcoming Fedspeak be more dovish than expected, investors are likely to reverse back into technology stocks and Apple in particular.

With fundamental triggers still fluid, could technicals be providing additional clues to where the supply-demand dynamic currently stands?