Virus Surge Threatens Newfound U.S. Corporate Profit Optimism

In a year that saw corporate forecasts canceled faster than travel plans, the third-quarter U.S. earnings season brought a sense of normalcy with better-than-expected profits and rising forecasts. Now a second wave of Covid-19 infections and renewed lockdowns threaten to cloud those views.

With results from most of the S&P 500 companies in, nearly 85% have beaten profit estimates, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. About half of those that have reported raised fourth-quarter earnings forecasts, the largest proportion to do so in at least a decade.

While an effective vaccine is expected to be widely distributed in 2021, surging U.S. infections are causing renewed angst as government officials re-impose the kind of restrictions that squelched the economy and roiled markets earlier this year. The outlook gets murkier when you add in President Donald Trump’s refusal to accept the election outcome and control of the U.S. Senate hanging in the balance until runoff elections in Georgia in January.

“The market is churning a bit as investors digest the recent ramp higher, grapple with a worsening in the Covid-19 spread and anticipate another highly contested election in Georgia,” Cannacord Genuity strategists including Tony Dwyer told clients in a research note this week. Their advice is to take advantage of any weakness to add exposure in assets including small-cap stocks, economically sensitive sectors, emerging markets and commodities, given the “backdrop of historic money availability and continued global economic recovery.”