Fountainheadinvesting

Categories
Market Outlook

S&P 500 Q1-2024 Earnings Season Recap: Strong Growth Signals Amidst High Expectations

Earnings Season Recap – Q1-2024, 93% of S&P 500 companies have reported.

Earnings and revenues haven’t disappointed for Q1-2024

On a year-over-year basis, the S&P 500 is reporting its highest earnings growth rate since Q2 2022. This is a welcome return to profit growth after the 4 quarters decline and slowdown. To recall, S&P 500 earnings have stagnated at about $220 per share in 2022 and 2023.

If 5.7% is the actual growth rate for the quarter, it will mark the highest year-over-year earnings growth rate reported by the index since Q2 2022 (5.8%). 

Overall, 93% of the companies in the S&P 500 have reported actual results for Q1 2024 to date. Of these companies, 78% have reported actual EPS above estimates, which is above the 5-year average of 77% and the 10-year average of 74%. However, the magnitude of the beats is not high – 7.5% above estimates, which is below the 5-year average of 8.5% but above the 10-year average of 6.7%.

Revenues:

60% beat estimates – Below the 5-year average of 69%- and the 10-year average of 64%. Remember, this is after an extraordinary bout of inflation in 2022 and 2023. This had to come down because you’re comparing it to a higher base. The magnitude of beats is also low compared to historical averages – only 0.8% above, compared to 2% for 5-year averages and 1.4% for the 10-year. I suspect it will be difficult to raise prices further without reducing demand.

Overall – if 4.2% is the actual revenue growth for the quarter, it will be the 14th consecutive quarter of revenue growth for the index. 

Where will 2024 end up?

Estimates are looking pretty good – 9.2%, 8.2%, and 17.4% for Q2, Q3 and Q4 respectively. Though I’m hard-pressed to see that kind of a jump in Q4. I suspect quarterly growth will be smoother and not the massive spike in Q4.

The overall calendar 2024 growth call is at 11.1% – consistent with earlier calls and my projections of earnings growth from $220 per share in 2023 to $245 per share for 2024. FactSet had an interesting observation – markets have punished negative EPS surprises, – confirming the one trend we’ve been witnessing ourselves, that markets are overbought, and expectations are too high, and unless you beat severely or raise guidance, your stock will get hammered – Facebook (META) was the biggest example.

Q1-24 net profit margins were solid – indicating that price increases and better expense management vaulted NPM to 11.7% – above the previous quarter’s margin of 11.2% and the 5- and 10-year averages of 11.5% and 11.6%.

Overall S&P 500 earnings and revenue increases look good for 2024-2025. Current estimates for calendar 2025 are an even higher earnings growth of 14.1% – this could come down, though – 2024 is not going to be an easy year to beat by 14.1%!

As you know the S&P 500 is a value-weighted index and large caps such as the M-7 tend to skew the numbers higher, even with Apple and Tesla being negative. Also, the “AI” effect has spread, and copper companies and utilities are getting a second look because of power demands, as are smaller players supplying components towards the gold rush among others – thankfully this is moving to other sectors of the economy.

Valuations remain high, of course, the forward P/E is 20.7 – above the 5-year average of 19.2- and the 10-year average of 17.8. Thankfully, at least interest rates are a little lower at 4.45% compared to 4.75% in April. My inclination is that this will trend lower to 4.1% to 4.25% by the end of the year. 

Bottom line – Harder to find bargains. No major surprises, we remain on track for earnings to get to $245 for 2024 and possibly to $270-$275 for 2024, my cash holdings are down to 6-7%. Wall Street is even more aggressive – closer to 4%.

Categories
Semiconductors

Nvidia (NVDA) Update: Exceeding Expectations but Facing Margin Challenges

Nvidia’s results exceeded expectations as usual, kind of becoming a habit! The previous quarter’s (Jan 2024) revenue beat by $1.6Bn and it guided Q1-FY25 (April 2024) revenue 10% or 2Bn higher to $22Bn.

Shares took off from $675 to $725. Everybody’s happy. 

Now comes the tough part.

Nvidia had a net profit margin of 55% = $12.2Bn in profits on $22Bn in sales. That is drug lord margin territory! Simply, they can charge whatever they want for the H100s, the new Grace Hopper, and the H200s that are coming down the pike. I’m confident that these margins will continue for at least a year untill competitors get their act together.

However, to assume that these margins will continue beyond that is difficult to swallow, and most of the street estimates for earnings are based on at least 52% in NPM, which if not achieved can be a huge disappointment.

So I modeled earnings at a 40% Net Profit Margin, which is similar to a big pharma company’s patented drug margin that also charges as much as the market can pay for it.

With that NPM, Earnings come down naturally; three years down the road in the 40% model, EPS is  $26 compared to the street estimate of $33. Assigning a P/E of 40, that gets us to $1,030 from today’s price of $725 or an annualized gain of 12%. And if the street is correct, we’re looking at 40*33 =$1,320 or an annualized gain of 22%.

The counter argument to the lower margin thesis is – Nvidia can lower prices and sell more, and at some point this is likely to happen – the overall growth doesn’t reduce – especially if you’re changing the whole paradigm of accelerated computing replacing the way data centers are built now.

At the moment, I’m not planning to add any more, my exposure to Nvidia is already very high, and the long-term thesis doesn’t change.

Categories
Networking

Arista Networks: A Strong Buy for Long-Term Growth in Network Infrastructure

Arista Networks: (ANET) Buy, $$245  One year target $280. 

Invest 5 Years, 16-20% annual return. P/E 34, 3-5 year EPS growth 14-16%. 

Best large-scale network provider for hyperscalers like Meta and Microsoft. Unlike Cisco (CSCO), Arista didn’t focus on selling gear, instead, it partnered with hyperscalers to build their networks and platforms from scratch. This is a unique competitive advantage and very profitable too; Arista boasts the best margins (32% operating profit) and cash flow in the industry. It is a bit expensive with much of the Earnings growth of 44% in 2023 already priced in, with the stock doubling from $120 last year. Still, an excellent long-term play as the pick and shovels play for AI and high-speed data networks; it tends to surprise so the EPS growth could likely be higher.

I’ve owned it since May 2023 and I add on declines, my last purchase was around $231.