Investors Eye Profit Rebound After Yearlong Earnings Recession

Stock bulls reeling from the worst month of 2023 have at least one reason for optimism: Corporate profits are set to rebound sharply in the fourth quarter.

Net income at S&P 500 companies is projected to grow about 7.6% year over year in the period, snapping a run of four straight contractions, according to data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligence. Third-quarter earnings reports that start in earnest next week are likely to show profits fell slightly — 0.3%, based on the data — but that’s also still a quick rebound from the 5.7% profit drop of the previous three months.

A bounce-back in profits would be a lifeline for investors unsettled by a two-month selloff in the S&P 500, which is portending diminishing hopes of an economic soft landing in defiance of the Federal Reserve’s aggressive hiking cycle. On Tuesday, the benchmark slumped to its lowest level since June after a surprising increase in US job openings.

The upbeat profit forecast suggests companies that struggled to defend margins as inflation flared the past two years are now enjoying the benefits of a slowdown in the rate of price growth. They are also cutting costs to offset the impact from higher-for-longer interest at the same time that the American consumer continues to spend at relatively stable rates.

“High inflation resulted in margin compression for non-energy companies,” Bloomberg Intelligence Global Chief Equity Strategist Gina Martin Adams said in an interview. “Now slowing inflation, combined with the lagged effect of last year’s layoffs, is resulting in margin expansion for the same.”

S&P 500 Earnings Are Set to Bounce Back in 4Q