Merrill's Steinberg Turns Bullish on Earnings, but Bernstein Remains Bearish -- NYTimes
March 17, 1999
MARKET PLACE
1999 Is Already the Year of the Flip-Flop Forecast
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By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER
The unexpectedly strong performance of the economy so far this year has pushed the earnings forecasts of many strategists higher. For example, Bruce Steinberg, the chief economist at Merrill Lynch, turned his earnings growth prediction on its head, flipping to an increase of 3.5 percent from a decline of 5 percent.
But his colleague, Richard Bernstein, the director of quantitative research at Merrill Lynch, has a different view. Unlike Steinberg, he says the direction of earnings is down, not up. As he put it in a recent report, "We do not have one indicator that suggests that the profit cycle will accelerate."
Disagreements within one shop are not unusual, especially because big firms have many analysts who use different approaches to try to fathom what is going on in financial markets. But this difference in direction, especially after the two were in accord before Steinberg's switch, does show how confusing the earnings outlook might be for investors -- and how quickly it can change.
"The investment environment is very complex right now," Steinberg said, giving his view on what the difference in the forecasts means. "We each have our own discipline," he added. "Strategists and economists often disagree with each other, so this is not unusual."
Bernstein acknowledged that "it certainly is a difference in direction." He explained that his forecast is the outgrowth of his main theme for 1999 -- that the profit cycle has decoupled from the economic growth cycle. That is, profits can now lag behind the pace of the economy, which is the opposite of the situation in the mid-1990's, when profits were growing at a double-digit pace.
While the economy grew briskly at a 3.9 percent rate last year, operating profits for the 500 companies in the Standard & Poor's stock index rose five-tenths of 1 percent, according to I.B.E.S. International, which tracks company earnings. The performance was better -- but well off a double-digit pace -- according to the First Call Corporation, the other major company that collects earnings forecasts. It put earnings growth at 3.7 percent.
Bernstein also notes that Merrill's current 1999 earnings estimate for the S.& P. 500 companies has fallen below Wall Street's consensus, an unusual occurrence.
What makes this debate important is that the move to 10,000 by the Dow Jones industrial average, the new highs for the S.& P. 500 and the rebound in the Nasdaq composite index, despite a lot of earnings warnings from technology companies, all seem to be riding, in part, on the expectation of a revival in corporate profits later this year.
Both I.B.E.S. and First Call are expecting big jumps in earnings in the third and fourth quarters. Using the so-called bottom-up approach, which is based on a separate earnings forecast for each of the companies in the S.& P. 500, they both foresee earnings growing at more than 20 percent in the last two quarters of the year, following a jump to around 13 percent in the second quarter.
Although such predictions are traditionally too optimistic and are usually revised downward, these estimates are still awfully strong after a decline in earnings was posted as recently as the third quarter of 1998. In the current quarter, the two companies see growth of 5 percent to 7 percent. (Fourth-quarter 1998 performance, with the data all but complete, is difficult to assess because of the firms' differing calculation methods. First Call is up 6 percent, while I.B.E.S. is unchanged.)
But Bernstein says that earnings are not going to rebound because companies have lost their ability to raise prices and, in turn, pass on increasing costs, especially rising wages. He said that because rising labor costs could not be passed on in higher prices, profits were being squeezed. This squeeze, he said, will eventually force layoffs that will crimp consumer spending, the backbone of the economy's recent surprising performance.
"We differ from the consensus," he said, "in that we believe that the weakness in corporate profits will lead to increasing unemployment, slowing investment spending and a slowing in the overall economy during the year."
Steinberg acknowledged that there had been some disconnect between the performance of the economy and profits. But he says that there were a lot of one-time factors that contributed to the divergence in performance last year. And those factors, including the strikes at General Motors during the summer, will not be present this year, he said.
"This year has begun so strongly that earnings growth will pick up again," he said.
But while Steinberg may represent the consensus and Bernstein the contrarian view -- and investors may just have to choose whose view to follow -- they do agree on several areas. One is that consumer stocks are the place to be. Bernstein, although he sees slower growth, says that the loss of profit growth for companies turns out to be a gain for consumers. They are benefiting from both higher wages and savings from the inability of companies to pass on price increases.
And Steinberg, while far more bullish about earnings than he was three months ago, still thinks the stock market faces a rocky outlook.
"With the economy so strong, interest rates are not likely to fall," he said. "There even may be another growth scare, and interest rates may back up again. And that is not good for equities."
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