(Bloomberg) — Corporate America is sending an important signal this earnings season that the rally in US stocks can continue to broaden out beyond technology shares.
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The mention of a “bottom” in results this reporting period through last week is up 56% from a year earlier, according to Bank of America. In the past, such references have preceded a broad improvement in earnings, the bank said.
Importantly, cyclical companies, whose prospects are closely tied to the trajectory of the economy, were heavily represented among the companies that have reported. Should earnings in that cohort start to improve, that would be a bullish development for investors worried about the dominance of technology shares in a market that has gone from one record to the next this year.
A broadening becomes especially important for the rally’s progress now that megacap tech companies are projected to show slowing profit growth, on average. Results from those behemoths are set to start rolling in after Tuesday’s close, when Alphabet Inc. is due to report.
“We feel like third-quarter earnings for a lot of cyclical companies represent a bottom,” said Joe Gilbert, a portfolio manager at Integrity Asset Management. “This does not mean, however, that we are off to the races with earnings estimates going higher, but it does give us confidence that the environment is not going to get worse.”
It’s been a tough stretch for cyclical sectors, which have had to grapple with feeble demand and higher inventories after the Federal Reserve boosted interests rates to the highest in decades to quell inflation. With the central bank easing and the economy in solid shape, the outlook for these companies is brightening.
“Companies have been operating in a weak demand environment for almost two years now due to the weakness in goods/manufacturing,” Bank of America strategists wrote in an Oct. 28 report. “But we see signs that the worst may be behind us.”
For next year, they wrote, “we expect a healthy volume recovery in manufacturing/goods sectors that have been pressured by higher rates, which should translate to upside” in earnings per share.
US manufacturing activity shrank in September for a sixth month, reflecting weak orders and declining employment. However, on a more promising note, a Dallas Fed manufacturing survey suggests that the October ISM is likely to tick up, wrote Chris Collins at Bloomberg Economics.