The macro backdrop can turn on a dime, and the carefree, spendthrift ways of summer has seemingly been replaced with a healthy dose of seriousness in September and a palatable slowing across certain sectors, most notably in Materials and Energy. Activism is on the rise and strategic investor relations has never been more important in preserving and creating value. What investors don’t fully understand, they will sell. What they don’t know, they won’t buy. But for the most part, institutional investors must be fully invested in the market and dislocation, like what we’re seeing now, creates opportunity. With over $12.6 trillion in active equity assets under management just in the U.S. alone, your ability to capture investor mindshare [and wallet] is well within your control and in front of you. And we’re here to help.
As we do every quarter, we analyzed annual revenue and EPS guidance provided by 30 industrial companies with market caps greater than $500M that have reported to date.1 Below are our findings.2
For comparison purposes, we are providing an “All-Company” benchmark, which represents all companies above $500M market cap and across all sectors that have reported since September 26, which we track in real time.3
On average, the overarching trends are that Industrials are lowering revenue guidance above the All-Company benchmark and raising EPS outlooks at higher levels.
Annual Revenue Guidance
Annual Adjusted5 EPS Guidance
Further, we analyzed the earnings calls for this group and the broader industrial universe to identify key themes.
As we noted last week in our Inside The Buy-Side® Industrial Sentiment Survey®, our survey found more investor and executive alignment overall than in prior quarters, but with waning enthusiasm across both camps as most shifted into neutral. Heading into Q3’23 earnings season, Industrial investor sequential performance expectations were for results in line with last quarter and analyst estimates, with the level of those expecting QoQ improvement falling to the lowest level since Q4 of last year.
Industrial earnings call commentary reveals waning executive confidence. While results thus far indicate generally stable — even positive — sequential performances, executives across various sub-sectors express caution for the remainder of 2023 and into the first half of 2024.
As the latest U.S. GDP results showed, consumer spending through the third quarter kept keepin’ on. That said, the GDP print is backward-looking, and largely reflects summertime consumer spending which, as we have reported, added to the largest gap between consumer credit and savings rates in modern history.
As such, many industrials note they are watching consumer activity with a keen eye, along with various other moving targets including geopolitical uncertainty, wage inflation, destocking trends, and softening pricing power. To that end, companies have managed to bolster margins thus far through a combination of cost cutting and input pressure stabilization. While some have succeeded in implementing price increases without compromising orders, cursory indications of waning pricing power, fueled by softening inflation, suggest that future price increases will need to be more modest and strategic.
As the economy adjusts to a “higher for longer” interest rate backdrop, industrials note project activity has softened. Though organic growth investments continue to remain the primary focus, companies are keeping a watchful eye on M&A should opportunities materialize, while balancing the impact of today’s higher cost of debt capital.
Key Earnings Call Themes
Macro Challenges Anticipated to Persist into 2024 as Interest Rates Hinder New Project Starts; Meanwhile Freight Recession Appears Poised for Improvement, But Still “Not All Peaches and Cream”
Freight Recession
Reduced Discretionary Spending Finds Itself Amplified by Reluctance to Restock Inventory; Meanwhile Despite the Recent Ford Agreement, UAW Strikes Far-reaching, Prompting Cautious Guidance and Vigilance
Destocking
UAW Strikes
Despite Lower Demand and Signs of Downward Pricing Pressure, Execs Holding Firm on Margin Rates, Helped by Pockets of Deflation
Pricing
Inflation
Companies Prioritize Organic Growth, Innovation, and Technology Investments; M&A is Increasingly on the Radar Should a Market Dislocation Create Opportunities
Citing Stable Demand That is More Moderate Than the U.S., Companies See Some Encouraging Signs, Though Inflation and Geopolitical Uncertainty Remain Factors
So far, while Q3 prints for industrials are faring generally well, calls for softening conditions through the remainder of the year are prevalent. We’re seeing revenue guides adjusted lower at rates outpacing the all-sector averages, and cautious outlooks through the first half of 2024. Still, companies are controlling what they can and focusing on the margin, and that confidence has translated into notable EPS hikes across the sector.
We’ll continue to provide insights into the different sectors as earnings season rolls on.