S&P 500: Q4 earnings season off to weaker start

In This Article:

Fourth-quarter earnings are off to a rough start as less companies are reporting results above estimates than in the previous five-year average, according to FactSet.

Yahoo Finance Markets Reporter Josh Schafer shares an overview of earnings sentiment so far, looking at the S&P 500's (^GSPC) record-high, tech company forecasts, and expectations for Tesla's (TSLA) earnings

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Editor's note: This article was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

SEANA SMITH: Let's stick with the earnings conversation because new data out from Factset's showing that fourth-quarter earnings results are off to a sluggish start. With about 10% of S&P 500 companies reporting results so far, earnings have declined about 1.7%. Here with more, Yahoo Finance's Markets Reporter Josh Schafer.

And, Josh, we were just talking to Octavio about this. But looking ahead in terms of what the Street consensus is coming off of these results that we've gotten so far. What do you make in terms of that setup then, heading into these results that we'll be getting over the coming days?

JOSH SCHAFER: Yeah, I was thinking as you guys were just talking, like, if we want to call it a hockey shootout or something, you normally want your top scorer to go first. And we kind of just sent out--

SEANA SMITH: It set the tone.

JOSH SCHAFER: Yeah, yeah, and we just sent out maybe like a third liner or something-- when we're thinking about financials and thinking about--

SEANA SMITH: It's not great?

JOSH SCHAFER: Not good. Not good if you're not a hockey fan for that comparison.

BRAD SMITH: It's me.

JOSH SCHAFER: But yeah. But we have tech coming up, right? And tech is one of the sectors that people still expect to do well. And when I'm talking about tech, I'm not necessarily even talking about Netflix and Tesla, which you see on the board there.

Remember, they're not actually core-tech companies. We just refer to them in that sense. But we really have tech earnings in and of themselves next week. But one thing that's been interesting to see so far, and I'm curious to see if this narrative changes-- is Bank of America as I would one of their earnings updates pointing out what the stock reactions have been.

So companies that beat on-revenue and beat on-earnings beat the Street's estimates on both. Their stock the next day-- up 0.2%. 20 basis points. Not very impressive if you're someone that owns one of those stocks and is happy your company beat earnings, right?