The earnings recession is here, and it’s about to get even worse
Second quarter earnings season begins in earnest this week, and the forecast is rather bleak.
Expectations are for earnings to decline for a third straight quarter. Consensus estimates project a decline of about 7% in earnings per share among S&P 500 companies compared to the same quarter last year, which would mark the steepest decline since 2020, per UBS.
Across the sectors, Consumer Discretionary and Communications Services are the only two of the 11 sectors expected to see second quarter earnings growth materially higher.
Meanwhile, S&P 500 companies are also expected to see no year-over-year revenue growth for the first time in 10 quarters, per Goldman Sachs.
“US economic growth has remained strong since the start of 2Q and explains most of the sales growth in our top-down model,” David Kostin, Goldman Sachs chief equity strategist, wrote in a note on July 7. “However, weaker commodity prices and falling inflation, which may limit firms’ pricing power, are incremental headwinds to S&P 500 sales growth.”
Thematically, AI buzz will likely get more scrutiny from investors. After AI-led gains last earnings season, Goldman Sachs argues this quarter will be more about if those AI promises are starting to turn into meaningful profits — and when that can be expected. The health of the consumer and the state of the financial system after the spring’s banking crisis will also be key themes to watch.