Dow and S&P 500 Price Setup: Earnings Vs Momentum

S&P 500, SPX, DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE, DJIA – OUTLOOK:

  • Earnings estimates continue to be downgraded.
  • However, the upward momentum in the DJIA and S&P 500 index has improved in recent weeks.
  • What’s the outlook on the two indices?

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The upward momentum in US equities is improving just as earnings downgrades continue as the reporting season picks up steam. Will earnings undermine the turnaround in stocks?

2023 consensus EPS estimates continue to fall, now down over 10% since mid-2022 as analysts continue to downgrade their estimates for 2023 and 2024 amid recession risks. The S&P 500 is reporting a year-on-year decline in earnings of -6.5% for Q1-2023, which would make this the largest earnings decline since Q2-2020.

However, the actual earnings growth rate has exceeded the estimated earnings growth at the end of the quarter in 37 out of the past 40 quarters for the S&P 500 companies. Moreover, actual earnings reported by the index constituents have exceeded estimated earnings by 6.4% on average over the past 10 years, according to FactSet.

S&P 500 Weekly Chart

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Chart Created by Manish Jaradi Using Tradingview

So far, first-quarter earnings reported have come in contrary to pessimistic expectations – of the companies reported so far, 90% have exceeded EPS estimates while 73% beat in sales, making this the best upside surprise in the first week of a reporting period since 2012, according to reports.

Dow Jones Industrial Average Daily Chart

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Chart Created by Manish Jaradi Using Tradingview

This comes in as breadth and momentum indicators have improved in recent weeks as risk appetite has stabilized from the low levels hit in March on fading banking sector concerns and hopes of a mild/shallow US recession. If the historical trend of actual earnings surpassing estimated earnings holds, there could be room for equities to cheer given investors have withdrawn from US equities in 11 out of 15 weeks this year, while cash allocations of private investors are high.

In terms of market breadth, 61% of the members of the S&P 500 index are above their respective 200-day moving averages, while 70% of the members are above their 10-day moving averages, suggesting the rebound since has been broad-based. Wider participation of members tends to raise the likelihood of a sustainable trend.

S&P 500 Daily Chart

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Chart Created by Manish Jaradi Using TradingView

Note: In the above colour-coded chart, Blue candles represent a Bullish phase. Red candles represent a Bearish phase. Grey candles serve as Consolidation phases (within a Bullish or a Bearish phase), but sometimes they tend to form at the end of a trend. Note: Candle colors are not predictive – they merely state what the current trend is. Indeed, the candle color can change in the next bar. False patterns can occur around the 200-period moving average, or around a support/resistance and/or in sideways/choppy market. The author does not guarantee the accuracy of the information. Past performance is not indicative of future performance. Users of the information do so at their own risk.

S&P 500: Bullish phase

From a trend perspective, the S&P 500 is in a bullish phase – see colour-coded chart based on trend/momentum indicators, first highlighted in January (see “S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 Index Technical Outlook: Turning Bullish”, published January 28.

Bullish momentum in the S&P 500 index has improved in recent months – see the Moving Average Convergence Divergence indicator on the weekly charts. The index is now testing a vital hurdle at the February high of 4195. A decisive break above could pave the way initially toward the August high of 4325.

Dow Jones Industrial Average Weekly Chart

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Chart Created by Manish Jaradi Using TradingView

Dow Jones Industrial Average: Testing a crucial barrier

On technical charts, despite the downturn last year, the big-picture trend for the Dow Jones Industrial Average is bullish. That’s because the index has held major support on the 200-week moving average, coinciding with the 2020 high of 29570. The V-shaped rebound from October is a sign that the multi-month downward pressure is fading.

However, the index remains capped at key resistance on a horizontal line from August 2022 at about 34300. The index needs to break above the barrier for the downward pressure to reverse. On the downside, any break below the March low of 31430 would accentuate downside risks toward the 2022 low of 28715.

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— Written by Manish Jaradi, Strategist for DailyFX.com

— Contact and follow Jaradi on Twitter: @JaradiManish