More than half of the companies that comprise the Standard & Poor's 500 Index have reported earnings for the quarter, and two-thirds of them have exceeded expected earnings per share by an average of 7%, according to Thomson Financial, compared with 4.2% over the past eight quarters. Two explanations spring to mind: Either companies aren't very good at forecasting, which means they shouldn't give profit targets at all, or they are purposely low-balling to spur post-earnings enthusiasm in the stock market.
Interestingly -- or troubling, depending on your perspective -- is that revenue growth of 6.2% has been outpaced by per-share earnings growth of 9.9%. One implication of this is that companies are squeezing more profit out of every sale.
Many of them very well may have, helped in large part by the weak dollar's influence on international revenue. But maneuvers like stock buybacks, which can boost per-share earnings by reducing the number of shares outstanding, also appear to have played a role, as companies manipulate the legal levers to game the system so that their earnings will look more robust.
Native American Advisors, Inc.
- Dean Parisian
- CHIPPEWA PARTNERS is a Registered Investment Advisor and provides investment management to private investors, retirement plans and Native American tribal entities. Founded in 1995 as a fee-only money manager we are about doing the right things the right way and our expertise developed over 25 years balances financial acumen with absolute integrity. Dean Parisian is a former NASD and NYSE arbitrator and very successful trader who started his career on Wall Street in 1982 with Kidder Peabody and then with Drexel Burnham Lambert. The firm is a Life Member of the National Congress of American Indians and adheres to fiduciary standards. As a private, unbiased firm we know what to do and are prepared to do it. We invite your inquiry to manage your assets. ChippewaPartners@aol.com. Office: 877-772-1621 www.chippewapartners.com
Monday, April 30, 2007
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