Fed may have 'engineered a pretty brilliant soft landing': Strategist

In This Article:

Cooling inflation prints may prove to be the ideal lay-up for the Fed and earnings season this quarter. Baird Investment Strategy Analyst Ross Mayfield and Annandale Capital Founder George Seay share their opinions on the earnings performance of big bank stocks, such as JPMorgan and Wells Fargo, and what it may say about market volatility moving into the second half of 2023. Seay continues to say that the Fed may have even 'engineered a pretty brilliant' soft landing scenario, noting that further interest rate hikes won't immediately handicap markets or consumers.

This post was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

SEANA SMITH: Big names like JPMorgan, PepsiCo, and Delta all beating the Street's expectations.

But is that enough for investors and for the market to continue here to the upside?

We want to discuss with Ross Mayfield, Baird Investment strategy analyst, and George Seay, Annandale Capital founder and chairman.

Great to see you both.

Ross, let me start with you.

When it comes to even the results that we saw today, JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Citi, the trading action on those stocks have been mixed despite the fact that all three beat the Street's expectations.

So beating the Street's expectations, is that not going to be enough once again this quarter?

ROSS MAYFIELD: I think it's going to be enough to keep stocks from really retreating from this rally, but I don't know if it's enough to spark the next leg higher.

We saw, as we did in Q1 and as we see in most quarters, expectations and estimates drop across the quarter until the earnings season is really de-risked, but when you beat those estimates, you're beating kind of a lower estimate than otherwise would be expected.

So I think unless you're seeing big beats, double line beats, maybe it's not enough to spark the next leg higher for a market that's sitting at bull market highs or the highs for this cycle.

So I think it'll take a little bit more than just beating these de-risked estimates to spark a new leg higher.

SEANA SMITH: George, is it more about guidance?

We certainly know that is something that investors take very seriously, what they are focusing on when you're trying to gauge what the company, what the results are going to look like two, three quarters out from now.

Is that going to be really the driving factor here?

GEORGE SEAY: Well, that's the right question, Seana.

You have classic sell the news today, and you're going to have to really outperform what the Street is looking for to continue upward momentum in stocks, and you see that the Fab Seven stocks that have led the markets higher so much this year are starting to stall out a little bit, and the market just looks heavy and looks tired, and we've had such an unbelievable rally the first half of this year.