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The S&P 493's earnings recession is over: Morning Brief

This is The Takeaway from today's Morning Brief, which you can sign up to receive in your inbox every morning along with:

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The S&P 500 is up 17% so far this year.

But as investors have heard time and again, this performance can be largely attributed to just a handful of stocks tracking one theme — the Magnificent Seven and AI. As of late June, for instance, Nvidia (NVDA) alone had accounted for more than a third of the S&P 500's gains this year.

For the other 493 stocks in the benchmark index, both earnings growth and shareholder returns have been more measured. In fact, as the team at Bank of America pointed out in a note on Tuesday, these remaining members of the S&P 500 have been in an earnings recession since the beginning of last year.

According to data from BofA's US equity strategy team, earnings for the S&P 493 haven't registered year-over-year growth since the fourth quarter of 2022.

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After an annual drop of 2% in the first quarter of '23 and a 7% annual decline in the second quarter of last year, earnings growth has been flat for this group in each of the last three quarters, the firm's work shows.

The upcoming second quarter earnings period, however, should mark the end of what's been a stealth earnings recession for the vast majority of companies in the S&P 500. For the 493 non-Mag 7 stocks, earnings growth is forecast to clock in at 6%, 7%, and 13% annually over the second, third, and fourth quarters of 2024.

Now, this growth is still expected to lag the index's overall earnings growth, as the lion's share of this profit growth will be generated by the Technology (XLK) and Communications Services (XLC) sectors, which house AI beneficiaries like Nvidia, Microsoft (MSFT), Meta (META), and Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG). (Health Care, notably, is also set to see earnings rise by double digits in each of the next three quarters, though BofA cautions these are driven by one-time items rolling off the books for Pfizer (PFE) and Merck (MRK).)

Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang delivers his keystone speech ahead of Computex 2024 in Taipei on June 2, 2024. Computex is the top annual tech showcase in Taiwan, whose advanced semiconductor industry is crucial to the production of everything from iPhones to the servers that run ChatGPT. (Photo by Sam YEH / AFP) (Photo by SAM YEH/AFP via Getty Images)
Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang delivers his keystone speech ahead of Computex 2024 in Taipei on June 2, 2024. (SAM YEH/AFP via Getty Images) (SAM YEH via Getty Images)

Some on Wall Street have grown dismayed by the bifurcated performance between the haves (AI names) and have-nots (everyone else) in the S&P 500. But we think these numbers help us understand how we got here and where we're headed.

When 2024 began, one of the consensus views on Wall Street was that the market rally would broaden out after a 2023 surge defined by the AI theme. To date, this trade has not been a feature of this market. The fundamentals — i.e., earnings growth — help explain why.

In each of the last two quarters, the aforementioned Technology sector has seen earnings growth of 25% and 27%, respectively; for Communications Services, earnings growth has been even more gaudy at 53% and 43% over those periods.

It's little wonder, then, why these sectors — and the most influential components within them — have been at the center of both the market conversation and most of the returns.

And some strategists choosing to move away from talking about the so-called benchmark index as a useful benchmark for most investors is also more than sensible in this environment.

As Piper Sandler's Michael Kantrowitz told Yahoo Finance on Monday, the correlation between the S&P 500 index and its constituents has moved toward a 25-year low. And if the S&P 500 is to be a stand-in for "the market" and most stocks aren't trading in line with this market, then what are we really talking about?

Yet, as often happens in the investing world, this peak of frustration with a market environment that has come to resemble celebrity culture, in which just a few stars draw the headlines, appears set to crescendo. At which point stocks that comprise "anything else" will meet an investor community eager to think about just that.

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