First quarter earnings season for American corporations was much stronger than expected, with more than two thirds of all companies beating Wall Street's forecasts. This followed on the heels of reports that this earnings quarter was going to be a major disappointment: CNN polled a group of economists in April and found that they expected a 0.1 percent increase in earnings for the S&P 500. Everyone expected Apple to have a strong first quarter, but the consensus for the other 499 companies was that earnings would actually drop, by 1.6 percent.
In reality, first-quarter earnings growth averaged over 7 percent. Of the 30 stocks in the Dow Jones industrial average, 26 of them beat expectations, and another two matched them. Even Hewlett-Packard, which took the occasion of its earnings report to also announce that it was laying off 27,000 of its employees, beat the Wall Street forecasts.
And yet, the market has been sliding sideways lately, if not worse. And the longer earnings season goes on, the worse the market has been doing. What's going on here?
To be sure, it was a very positive earnings season. Companies are expected to beat their earnings forecasts; historically, more than 60 percent of all reporting companies outperform the estimates of the Wall Street analysts. But according to the financial research firm S&P Capital IQ, that number was closer to 70 percent for the first quarter of 2012.
Alcoa kicked off earnings season, as it traditionally does, back on April 10, and like most of the companies that followed, it blew past expectations. While analysts had forecast a small loss, Alcoa announced earnings of 9 cents per share.
Perhaps most impressive was the performance of the financial sector, which saw its earnings rise 15 percent from the previous quarter. Regions Financial Corporation, a multifaceted banking company based in Birmingham, Alabama, saw its earnings per share rise by an astonishing 1300 percent. Even a regional behemoth like Fifth Third Bancorp had an increase in earnings of 260 percent.