Like a bad wedding DJ’s hand on the volume button the second a Pitbull song comes on, Wall Street analysts are cranking up earnings estimates at record speeds this quarter. Q2 earnings from companies in the S&P 500 are doing wildly better than expected, with aggregate earnings per share up 11% compared to the same time last year. Things seem…good? Wall Street analysts are bumping up estimates at the fastest rates in about four years, according to Citigroup data. Roughly 58% of companies in the S&P 500 increased their full-year guidance during the quarter. That’s double the number compared to last quarter, when companies were slashing or completely pulling forecasts over tariff concerns. Reasons for the boost When the bar is on the floor, it’s pretty easy to surpass it. Plus, tariffs are still just a bogeyman for many companies, which haven’t yet felt their full effect. Some have offset levies by relying on pre-tariff stockpiles and supplier negotiations. But most economists say that companies—and consumers—won’t feel the full weight until the second half of the year. The earnings data set is also kinda limited: 1) not every company in the index has reported Q2 earnings yet and 2) the S&P 500 in general is mostly being propped up by huge tech companies that are capitalizing on a massive AI bubble boom: - A weaker US dollar has helped push sales growth outside of the US for larger companies, according to Goldman Sachs.
Big picture: The summer rally might have analysts running to their computers to toss some more zeros and plus signs in their reports, but even the CEOs sharing better-than-expected earnings are getting nervous. McDonald’s execs, for instance, reported a solid Q2 earlier this month but warned its lower-income customers were retreating—a red flag for the economy. Looking ahead…Walmart and Target are expected to report earnings later this week, which will paint a better picture of the current state of retail.—MM |