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Source: CFO Journal. (The Wall Street Journal Digital Network), October 3, 2012 article

 

CFO Report

 

October 3, 2012, 4:05 PM ET

More Companies Guiding Below Analyst Estimates: FactSet

 

 

[Maxwell Murphy]

Roughly 80% of companies in the S&P 500-stock index that have issued earnings guidance for the third quarter have given a view that was below analysts’ mean estimates at the time, according to research published on Tuesday by FactSet.

Overall, 82 companies have issued “negative” guidance, compared with 21 companies whose third-quarter forecasts topped estimates, FactSet said. If no other companies issue guidance that falls outside analyst estimates, 82 will mark the third-highest number of “negative” guidance since FactSet began tracking guidance at the beginning of 2006, behind the 84 in the fourth quarter of 2011 and 83 in the fourth quarter of 2008. And 21 would mark the lowest quarterly “positive” number FactSet has recorded.

Unlike in past quarters that had a large number of negative forecasts, Wall Street isn’t punishing the stock prices of companies who provide a downbeat view. On average, the stocks of the 82 were flat during the period from two days before the guidance through two days after it, FactSet said. Ten companies even saw a double-digit percentage increase. This compares with an average dip of 1.8% for companies giving negative guidance over the past five years.

And companies that guided higher than the mean estimate are benefitting more than usual. The average increase for these companies was 6.7% over the four days that bookend the guidance, compared with a five-year average gain of 2.6%.

Providing guidance has been particularly tricky this year due to uncertainty throughout the global economy, CFO Journal reported earlier this week. Rather than curtailing the practice, many companies have widened the range of their guidance and stepped up investor outreach following a downbeat forecast.

 

Copyright ©2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Highest percentage of negative guidance to date, but average stock prices are flat

Oct 2, 2012

For Q3 2012, 82 S&P 500 companies have issued negative EPS guidance while 21 companies have issued positive EPS guidance. If 82 is the final number of companies issuing negative EPS guidance for the quarter, it will mark the third highest number for a quarter during the past five years, only trailing the numbers recorded in Q4 2011 (84) and Q4 2008 (83). If 21 is the final number of companies issuing positive guidance for the quarter, it will mark the lowest number of companies for a quarter since FactSet began tracking guidance in Q1 2006.

As a result, the overall percentage of companies issuing negative guidance for Q3 2012 stands at 80% (82 out of 103). If this is the final percentage for the quarter, it will be the highest percentage recorded since FactSet began tracking guidance data in Q1 2006. The Q4 2011 quarter currently has the record for the quarter that finished with the highest percentage of companies issuing negative EPS guidance (73%).

 

At the sector level (with a minimum of five companies issuing quarterly EPS guidance), the Health Care (100%) and Materials (100%) sectors have the highest percentages of companies that have issued negative EPS preannouncements, while the Consumer Staples (50%) and Industrials (44%) sectors have the highest percentage of companies that have issued positive EPS preannouncements.

Although the percentage of negative preannouncements is running at an all-time high, the market is not punishing the price performance of these stocks in the short term. For the 82 companies that have issued negative EPS guidance for Q3 2012 to date, the average price change (2 days before the guidance was issued through 2 days after the guidance was issued) was 0.0%. This percentage is above the average over the past five years of -1.8%. Just under half of the companies (36) that have issued negative guidance have recorded an increase in price during this time frame. Ten of these companies witnessed a double-digit increase in price.

For companies that have issued positive guidance, the story has been even better. Of the 21 companies that have issued positive EPS guidance for Q3 2012, the average price increase has been +6.7%. This percentage is also well above the average over the past five years of +2.6%.

On average, companies issued EPS guidance that was 10.5% below the mean EPS estimate. This difference is below the trailing 5-year average (-7.8%).

Read more about the EPS guidance trends of the S&P 500 in this month's edition of FactSet Guidance Monthly.

 

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