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Companies have started to report third quarter earnings. With the economy
facing various crosscurrents, earnings will be able to shed light on the strength
of different sectors. It will also be important to see which companies are
able to pass along higher costs. So far there have been 130 S&P 500 companies
that have reported third quarter earnings. Overall, earnings have been better
than expected with 67.7% exceeding estimates and 18.5% missing analysts' forecasts.
However, aggregate earnings are lower than forecasts. A large portion of this
shortfall, if not the entire difference, is likely due to the larger than expected
loss from General Motors. On Monday, General Motors reported a third quarter
loss of $1.92 per share, far surpassing the loss of $0.87 analysts were expecting.
The automaker also announced that it had reached a tentative agreement with
the United Auto Workers to lower healthcare costs. The company said that it
will lower its cost structure by $8 per share. While the stock jumped by 7.5%
on the day of the announcement, several analysts were not impressed. Ronald
Tadross, analyst at Bank of America, wrote that "only $1-$2 is incremental
and offset by worse than expected 2005 performance."
Retail sales increased 0.2% in September. This was lower than the 0.5% increase
economists expected. Most of the weakness was due to a 2.8% drop in auto sales.
Excluding auto sales, retail sales increased 1.1%, which was better than the
0.8% gain expected. On a year-over-year basis, retail sales increased 7.1%,
which was the slowest since May. Excluding auto sales, which were down 5.0%
from last year, sales increased 10.6%, which was only 0.1% slower than retail
sales last month. Sales at department stores were the only other area that
didn't increase sales from last September.
Inflation is heating up. The Labor Department reported that the Consumer Price
Index rose 1.2% in September and was 4.7% higher than a year ago. It was the
highest monthly increase since January 1980 and the highest year-over-year
increased since 1991. Obviously, a large part of the increase was in energy.
Excluding food and energy, consumer prices increased only 0.1% from August
and 2.0% from last year. Producer prices also jumped in September. Producer
prices increased 1.9% from August and 6.9% from last September. Both were the
largest increases since the 1990.
The ability of companies to pass along higher prices is the $64,000 question.
We have detailed several companies that have been able to pass along price
increases. It is also important to keep in mind that several companies have
not experienced an increase in raw materials because of long-term supply contracts.
During its conference call, Hasbro said that it locks in prices at the beginning
of the year. It did say it will experience higher prices next year when the
existing contracts expire. Hasbro also noted that since it introduces a lot
of new products every year it is easier for them to raise prices. Instead of
having to raise prices on existing products, new products are introduced at
higher price points.
We have discussed the furniture makers several times over the past couple
of years. It just keeps getting worse. This week La-A-Boy and Stanley Furniture
announced earnings would be lower than analysts expect. La-Z-Boy said it expects
to lose $0.17-$0.21 per share for the quarter ending this month. Analysts were
expecting that much in profit. The company blamed materials shortages, especially
foam, along with slower retail sales. Stanley reported third quarter results
that were at the low end of guidance and said fourth quarter earning would
be about 20% lower than estimates. The company now expects fourth quarter sales
growth to be in a range of -2.1% to +1.5%. Analysts were expecting sales to
increase around 6%.
The homebuilders have come under pressure lately. Three of the large homebuilders
have reported third quarter earnings that exceeded analysts' estimates. Ryland
earned $2.39 per share during the third quarter, a dime better than analysts
were expecting. Homebuilding revenue increased 21%, with pricing up 8% and
volume up 12%. The company said that it expects earnings will increase 15%
in 2006. It appears the CEO is spending too much time watching the company's
stock price. During the conference call is said, "You know, I took a poll of
7,000 public companies last night, and they said they'd be ecstatic to have
15% growth next year."
On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve published the latest Beige Book, which said "Service
activity expanded in almost all the Districts." This is a departure from the
ISM non-manufacturing survey which showed a significant drop in business activity.
Manufacturing activity was also strong with only the St. Louis district reporting
mixed reports and the Atlanta district, where businesses are still recovering
from the hurricanes. Commercial real estate has been recovering for several
quarters and every district reported strength for office, retail, or industrial
space. In a clear departure from previous reports, residential real estate
was mixed. While demand remained high, several districts noted that housing
demand slowed. Labor markets were also characterized as tight with gains in
the financial sector noted by several districts. Also, truck drivers are in
high demand. Most districts said that wages gains have been "moderate," but
a few said that wages have increased "briskly" or "noticeably." The latest
focus on inflation is not misplaced. All twelve districts reported "a pickup
in cost pressures from the recent increases in the prices of energy, petroleum-based
products, and shipping." The ability for companies to pass along higher costs
remains mixed.
Investors have a lot to focus on. While consumers have yet to curtail spending,
there are several events that will likely weigh on household budgets this winder.
Higher energy prices are the most discussed. Consumers will also face higher
debt payments as interest rates continue to increase and the new regulations
that increase the minimum credit card payment.
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