Hard Landing, Soft Landing, or Goldilocks? Clues From Preliminary Earnings Reports

 | Jan 19, 2023 19:13

  • Recent economic data suggests the domestic economy could skirt a recession
  • Robust jobs numbers, declining inflation trends, and hope that earnings hang in there are areas the bulls point out
  • Some firms, though, have issued cautionary profit outlooks
  • What’s the state of the consumer? Struggling amid still-high inflation and dwindling pandemic-related excess savings?

    Thriving in a bountiful jobs market that features improving real wages and the lowest unemployment rate since 1969? It seems there’s data to go either way at this point as recession fears ease. Both the December payrolls report and CPI reading suggest that a goldilocks economic outcome might not be so farfetched. Of course, the x-factor is Chair Powell and the rest of the Federal Reserve. 

    Other hopeful signs are out there, too. Lower commodity prices, benign credit spreads, and a tick down in interest rates help to loosen financial conditions. The flip side is that scenario works to the detriment of the Fed’s mission to squash inflation sooner rather than later. We’ll know much more over the coming weeks as major U.S. and global corporations report Q4 results

    But some clues have already been left by major firms issuing preliminary earnings and sales numbers – some good, some quite cautionary. Let’s dig into a few key pre-announcements [sourced by Wall Street Horizon] and what they might mean for equities as we embark on an uncertain 2023.

    h2 Soft Landing? How About a Bullish Takeoff in Airlines Stocks?
     /h2

    One of the major preliminary earnings reporters to cap off 2022 was a bellwether transports industry company within the Industrials sector. Delta Airlines (NYSE:DAL) held an investor day back in mid-December, and at the event, the management team voiced optimism regarding its 2023 and 2024 free cash flow generation outlook. Consumers, while strained by some metrics, still want to travel while business travelers return to the skies for corporate gatherings. 

    As oil prices retreat, the cost per available seat mile for DAL was down on a year-on-year basis, according to the investor day conference. As a result, on December 14, Delta raised its Q4 2022 EPS guidance from $1.00 - $1.25 to $1.35 - $1.40. Throw this in the ‘bullish on 2023’ category. Shares have taken flight since the start of this year. The stock ascended from $32 a few weeks ago to around $40 by mid-January. 

    On Friday, January 13, Delta reported better-than-expected top and bottom-line numbers, but shares traded lower initially due to reduced Q1 2023 EPS guidance. Still, the CEO said that $5 to $6 of per-share profits could be in the works this year due to solid revenue growth and costs that are in check.

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    Looking ahead, Delta’s management team is scheduled to speak at the Airfinance Journal Dublin 2023 conference on January 17 and 18, so be on guard for potential stock volatility.

    • Delta Airlines Rallies Following Bullish Preliminary Earnings and Guidance