Patience! Justice Is Coming
Immigration Officers' Dogs Are Being Targeted By Deranged Leftists in Minnesota
It's Time to Stop Watching Ms. Rachel
Bari Weiss Is Still Scorched After Running Disputed 60 Minutes Segment, and Another...
Who's Afraid of the Ten Commandments?
Dr. Trump Visits the Sick Men of Europe
Trump's Outrageous Threats Get Practical Results
Sanctuary by Another Name
Happy Anniversary: One Year of President Trump Back in Office
Partition Greenland!
$25M Ponzi Scheme Collapsed After Adviser Secretly Bet Client Funds on Single Stock
Retired DEA Agent Sentenced to Five Years in Prison for Corruption, Drug Conspiracy
U.S. House Defeats War Power Resolution
Cleaning Up SNAP: Healthier Food, Safer Cards, and Real Fraud Enforcement
Florida Nursing Assistant Convicted in $11.4 Million Medicare Brace Fraud Scheme
OPINION

Earnings Octane

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

Last week was all about earnings that mostly smashed expectations. Although the Street was still completely unforgiving to names that missed and/or provided punk guidance, a lot of beats were greeted with selling. However, the big boys stood tall, especially in the tech arena.

Advertisement

The most impressive earnings report came from Apple (AAPL) with a colossal beat Thursday after the close.  Last Friday, investors were fine with chasing names that provided strong guidance. The company is firing on all cylinders.  As for the earnings season thus far, results have been impressive. According to FactSet, 81% of S&P 500 names have reported results:

  • 66% beat on sales
  • 74% beat on earnings per share

Material names have enjoyed the largest average blended earnings beat at (+13.2%); chemical raw materials (+20%), and metals and mining (+14%), followed by information technology. In addition, there was a bunch of great economic data. Factory orders were paced by a 20.8% surge in civilian aircraft orders; a 33.2% jump in ships and boats came in at a headline of 1.4%, beating the Street estimate of 1.2%.

There was also merger mania across several industries, including Big Tech.

Midway through last Friday’s session, Qualcomm (QCOM) surged on a report from the WSJ that Broadcom LTD (AVGO) was preparing a bid for about $70.00 a share. I think that’s a real low-ball number, and I expect Qualcomm to hold out for at least another $10.00 added.

Advertisement

Related:

STOCK MARKET

Valuation Concerns

The market is on a tear, so its only natural people are guessing it’s time to pull back.  They assume valuations are excessive, but they aren’t.

Right now, the forward price-earnings (PE) ratio on the S&P 500 is 18.00, which is well above the five year average of 15.4 but it’s nowhere near levels associated with major market crashes.

Still, anxiety abounds with a checklist of worries, including:

  • Stocks soaring
  • Outsize valuation
  • Complacency
  • Merger mania

The market might be ‘due’ for a pullback, but this isn’t blind hysteria. It’s a wonderful moment in time that the market’s anticipation could set the stage for years of economic growth and prosperity.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement