Dear Clients & Friends,
Each quarter in the United States public companies enter “earnings season”. Earnings season provides a series of updates on the companies that we own inside our investment portfolios. During this quarter, the Standard & Poor 500 Index made all-time highs marking the stock market’s complete recovery from a nosedive at the end of last year. The benchmark index’s previous record was set last September, shortly before the market sank in the fourth quarter, amid fears of a recession, an escalating trade war between the United States and China, and concern that the Federal Reserve was moving too aggressively to raise interest rates.
Those concerns have eased or taken a back seat to more optimism among investors this year. Investors are more confident in the prospects for steady, if slower, growth. And they have been encouraged by an increasingly hands-off Federal Reserve, which has signaled this year that it may not raise interest rates at all in 2019 after seven increases the prior two years. Traders are also feeling more optimistic about the global economy. In China, economic growth held steady at 6.4% in the first quarter of the year as increased government efforts to stem a slowdown gained traction. In the U.S, job growth rebounded in March following a surprisingly weak February. In addition, the uncertainty over the costly trade dispute between the U.S. and China seemed to leave eased amid signs that both sides were making progress toward reaching a resolution. However, President Donald Trump’s recent decision to hike import taxes, effective on Friday (05/10/19) at 12:01 a.m. on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports from 10 percent to 25 percent could bring more uncertainty to the economy as well as the stock market. By the time you read this update, we will know whether a deal has been reached or not.
After this earnings season, is there a next gear for the markets to go higher, or are we running up a steeper hillside? Will the stock market continue to advance? This is the primary question for all investors right now. Finding the answer is all the more challenging when looking at the initial filings of quarterly reports for the first calendar quarter. At this point, most of the 505 members inside the Standard & Poor Index have reported their first quarter’s earnings and overall, the news is OK. Sales growth on average across the various sectors is up by 4.7% and earnings growth is up by 3.38% on average for the quarter. These numbers are down from last year when sales gains were near 10% and earnings were expanding at a rate above 20% in the second quarter. This slowdown is what the stock market was fearing during the fourth quarter last year before hitting a bottom on December 24. The Standard & Poor 500 Index has risen dramatically since then – up 24.05%, or 24.86% including dividends. This comes with a Fed that has remained on the sidelines, a bond market that is credit friendly and expectations for improvements in quarterly revenue and earnings growth for the current and remaining quarters of 2019.
During the quarter, there were several sectors of the economy that were leading in sales growth and showing impressive earnings expansion.
The above companies are only a few of the collection of dividend-paying stocks that we own in industries with improving revenue and earnings.
We want to thank all of you for giving our firm the opportunity to serve you. We thank you very much for the trust and confidence you have placed in our firm as it is always appreciated. Please contact us should you have any questions or comments.
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