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home / news releases / HIBL - S&P 500 Earnings: How Have Estimated 2023 Sector Growth Rates Changed Since 12/31/22?


HIBL - S&P 500 Earnings: How Have Estimated 2023 Sector Growth Rates Changed Since 12/31/22?

Summary

  • The 5-year Treasury yield jumped 27 bps last week, from 3.66% the prior week to close, to 3.93% at this Friday’s close. This is after falling 30 bps in the first week of January ’23.
  • The “estimated” S&P 500 earnings growth for 2023 (as a whole) has now slowed to 1.5% as of Friday, February 10, 2023.
  • Also taking a look here at sector growth rate estimates for 2023 and how they have changed since 12/31/22.

The 5-year Treasury yield jumped 27 bps last week, from 3.66% the prior week to close, to 3.93% at this Friday’s close. The interesting thing: in the first week of January ’23, the 5-year Treasury yield fell 30 bps on the week. As someone who isn’t a yield curve specialist, I thought it was worth noting if you want an idea of where the monetary policy and inflation debate is being played out.

The 5-year Treasury closed 2022 at 3.99%.

With 4th quarter earnings every year, most company managements usually give their first look at the coming twelve months' guidance, and this year was no exception. Here’s the IBES data by Refinitiv table that shows how the 11 S&P 500 sector growth rate estimates have changed for 2023 since 12/31/22.

As the reader can see, the “estimated” S&P 500 earnings growth for 2023 (as a whole) has now slowed to 1.5% as of Friday, February 10, 2023.

Fourth-quarter 2022 earnings will unofficially close when Walmart ( WMT ) reports on February 21, 2023.

Here’s a quick look at how each sector’s estimated growth rate has changed since 12/31/22:

  • Consumer Discretionary: -18% drop from 12/31/22, from expected growth of 29.1% to today’s expected growth rate of 23.9%;
  • Consumer Staples: 16% drop from a much slower growth rate from 5.5% to 4.6% as of today;
  • Energy: 15% drop from -13.2% to -15.5% for the Energy sector;
  • Financials: -11% drop from +13.1% to +11.7;
  • Health Care: Has slid sharply from a -2.9% expected growth rate to -7.8%.
  • Industrials: a 22% drop in estimates growth from +13.1% to +10.2%;
  • Basic Materials: down 42% since 12/31 from -11.2% to -15.9% at present;
  • Real estate: down minimally to -1.8% from -0.05%;
  • Technology: has fallen to 0% from +3.9%
  • Communication Services: has risen from +7% to +8.5% as of 2/10/23;
  • Utilities: has slid from 7.4% to 6.3%.

There are a couple of caveats here, i.e., the reader should ask is growth positive or negative, since a sector with a slowing growth rate that is already negative might be able to absorb negative revisions, as a decline in sector growth is already factored in for the full year, such as Energy.

Only Communication Services, whose two largest-cap names are Alphabet ( GOOG , GOOGL ) and Meta Platforms ( META ), saw positive revisions to the expected 2023 growth rate between 12/31/2022 and 2/10/23.

Basic materials looks to be seeing more harsh revisions than Energy.

Financial sector looks positive: good growth expected - low double digits - but would like to see negative revisions slow.

Here’s a quick ranking of highest to lowest growth rates for expected 2023 sector EPS growth:

  • Consumer Discretionary: +23.9%
  • Financials: +11.7%
  • Industrials: +10.2%
  • Communication Services: +8.9%
  • Utilities: +6.4%
  • Consumer Staples: +4.6%
  • Technology: 0%
  • Real Estate: -1.8%
  • Health Care: -7.8%
  • Energy: -15.5%
  • Basic Materials: -15.9%

Two of the worst sectors in ’22 were Discretionary and Communication Services and their ’23 growth rates are positive, while Energy, the best-performing sector in ’22 by a wide margin, is now near the bottom.

Looking at the percentage change of the sector’s expected growth versus the overall expected growth rate gives a reader the magnitude of the impact of guidance on 2023’s expected growth.

Summary / conclusion

While some might think this is “navel-gazing”, it pays to pay attention to expected growth rates and how they are changing over time for the sectors. Technology is still the big dog in the yard with a market cap weight of 27.4% of the S&P 500, with Financials being the next-biggest weight at 11.6%, both as of Friday, 2/10/23.

Technology’s flat EPS growth for 2023 might mean investors look at the other market cap asset classes like mid- and small-cap or the RSP (equal-weight) S&P 500, but that’s not a recommendation. Do your own homework - I’m just giving readers a feel for where the numbers are leading us, and they can often change, as we saw in 2022, where S&P 500 EPS gradually weakened through the year.

There is more to write about, but this week will be kept short because of the data.

Take this all in context of the market action. All raw data is sourced from IBES data by Refinitiv, but the calculations are my own. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Thanks for reading.

Original Post

Editor's Note: The summary bullets for this article were chosen by Seeking Alpha editors.

For further details see:

S&P 500 Earnings: How Have Estimated 2023 Sector Growth Rates Changed Since 12/31/22?
Stock Information

Company Name: Direxion Daily S&P 500 High Beta Bull 3X Shares
Stock Symbol: HIBL
Market: NASDAQ

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