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Fourth quarter earnings are not as rosy as they have been over the past several
quarters. Just over half of the 500 companies in the S&P 500 have reported
fourth quarter earnings. So far, 60% have exceeded estimates. It was over 70%
last quarter and has been over 60% since the fourth quarter of 2003. Additionally,
estimates for first quarter earnings growth have slowed dramatically. At the
beginning of the year, first quarter earnings growth for the S&P 500 was
expected to be 8.7%, as of last Friday, it stood at 5.8%. Most of the diminution
was due to the drop in estimates in the energy sector. Instead of growing earnings
13% this quarter, analysts now expect earnings to decline 1%. Earnings estimates
for technology stocks have also come down, now at 13% growth compared to 17%
four weeks ago.
The two weakest sectors of the economy have been automotive production and
residential real estate and companies tied to those industries have felt the
burden. Johnson Controls, one of the leading manufacturers of vehicle interiors,
said that North American auto production was down 8% to the lowest production
level in 20 years. The company added that production softened more than it
expected throught the quarter. The company's auto sales were also weak
in Europe, down 4%. Asian-Pacific volumes were flat as Japan was a slight drag
that was offset by the rest of the region. The company also has exposure the
residential housing in its HVAC segment. It noted that North American residential
sales were down 10%.
Eaton also noted that its automotive business was week during the fourth quarter
with sales down 6%. It forecasts that auto production will decline by another
4% this year as well. Eaton has benefited from the surge in heavy truck sales
ahead of the change in emissions standard that took effect at the beginning
of the year. During the fourth quarter, heavy truck sales increased 13% but
are forecasted to drop by 27% in 2007. During its conference call the company
noted that the manufacturing sector slowed during the fourth quarter as inventories
were burned off. The company expects this weakness will spill over into the
first quarter, but thinks manufacturing activity will pick up as the year progresses.
Overall the company sees economic growth of between 2.5% to 3.0% in 2007 with
the second half being stronger than the first six months. Geographically, the
company said that Europe was stronger than anticipated led by Germany and Japan
is performing similar to expectations.
The surge in heavy truck sales has caused an oversupply of trucks on the road
and has pressured results at most trucking firms. Werner reported fourth quarter
earnings of $0.31 per share, 14% lower than a year ago and a penny lower than
analysts forecasted. Revenue fell 1.5%. This not only pressures trucking firms,
but this has put pressure on some of railroads revenue as well. Union Pacific
noted in their conference call that the "ample supply of trucks that led to
declines in both the domestic and premium segments." Its revenue increased
9% in the fourth quarter, which was almost entirely due to an 8% increase in
revenue per car. The company noted that the weaker economic backdrop led to
volume increasing only 1%. Its agriculture and energy segments were the two
best performing areas with shipments up 4% and 10% respectively and combined
with higher prices, grew revenues by 20%. Automotive, chemical and industrial
products all saw lower shipments. Norfolk Southern announced that its fourth
quarter earnings rose 6.4%, but reduced its forecasts for the first half of
2007. Norfolk Southern has the largest exposure to vehicles and auto parts.
Auto shipments fell 16% in the fourth quarter, which was the fourth consecutive
quarterly decline. Additionally, weakness in the housing sector helped cause
a 7% drop in shipments of building supplies. Total volume fell 3% in the fourth
quarter. That was the first year-over-year drop in over three years.
New home sales increased by an annualized rate of 51,000 to 1.12 million in
January, plus December sales were revised higher by 22,000. While, this was
the best month since April, it was 11% lower than last year. While everyone
continues to believe the bottom in housing will occur this summer, there is
very little evidence to support this theory. Even the homebuilders say that
the bottom is not in sight, but they still believe that the market will start
to rebound later this year.
It also appears that the economy was not as weak during the fourth quarter
as economists expected. The Commerce Department reported that fourth quarter
GDP grew 3.5% compared to the growth of 3.0% economists were forecasting. Thanks
to government accounting, the way auto production is calculated for GDP distorted
third quarter and fourth quarter GDP. During the third quarter, GDP was boosted
higher by this and was reversed out during the fourth quarter. Adjusting for
the anomaly, fourth quarter GDP growth would have been 4.7%. While the GDP
report is generally viewed as being stronger than expected, there are a few
hints that everything is not as rosy as it appears. David Rosenberg, chief
economist at Merrill Lynch, noted that while real personal consumption rose
4.4% in the fourth quarter it was helped by a 0.8% decline in the personal
consumption price deflator. This was largely the result of lower energy prices,
but it was the first time it was negative since 1961. On a nominal basis, consumer
spending slowed to a 3.6% annual rate, which is almost half the 7.0% growth
during the first quarter.
Consumer confidence rose slightly in January and stands at the highest level
since May 2002. While the present situation increased, expectations fell 1.9
points to 94.5. Last month, expectations jumped 4.4 points last month. Better
job prospects were the leading cause for higher confidence. The percent of
respondents that felt employment opportunities were plentiful increased 2.3
percentage points to 29.9%, the highest since August 2001. Additionally, those
that felt jobs were hard to get dropped to 19.7% from 21.3% last month. Economists
will get a look at the labor market on Friday when the Labor Department issues
the employment report for January. Economists are expecting that 150,000 jobs
were created in January, which would be lower than the previous two months.
The ADP Employment survey reported that 152,000 jobs were added in January.
The Federal Reserve kept its target rate at 5.25%. Additionally, there has
been a shift in opinion over the past month that the Fed will maintain the
current level of interest rates much longer that was previously being forecasted.
The July Fed funds futures contract is pricing in a 2% chance of an ease during
the first half of the year. Traders are pricing in a 74% probability of a cut
this year. On December 1, traders were pricing in an almost 100% probability
that there would be three rate cuts in 2007 with two happening during the first
half of the year.
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