Each quarter, we analyze a basket of Materials companies with market caps greater than $1B that have reported to date, as this sector is a barometer for economic trends.1 Below are our findings.
For comparison purposes, we provide an “All-Company” benchmark, which tracks in real-time a basket of companies with market caps greater than $1B across all sectors that have reported earnings and provided guidance to date (n = 629).
Guidance Breakdown by Industry
Most ranges have been Maintained (64%), though 9% fewer have Lowered outlooks compared to the All-Company benchmark (16%); midpoints assume 180 bps of growth, on average
Most ranges were Maintained (60%), though 18% fewer Raised outlooks compared to the All-Company benchmark (42%); spreads average $0.36
We analyzed the earnings calls for this group and the broader Materials sector universe to identify key themes.
In last quarter’s Materials Sector Beat we reported, “While executive commentary has stopped short of characterizing the broad-based slowdown in inventory destocking as a “volume recovery”, early indications through January suggest there are reasons to be optimistic that demand will normalize as the year progresses. Indeed, many outlooks are baking in an uptick in dynamics through the back half of 2024.”
Fast forward to this quarter’s Beat, the Materials sector garnered the unique distinction as simultaneously being the largest bull- and bear-gainer in our Q1’24 Inside The Buy-Side® Earnings Primer®, while garnering enough bullish views to place it in the Top 3 most bullish sector, following Technology and Healthcare.
An examination of Materials sector earnings announcements this quarter finds an improving executive tone. “Variable” is the defining word this quarter. Its frequent appearance in prepared remarks and Q&A underscores an industry still in flux, but showing early signs of stabilization and more optimism relative to previously cautious views. This pivot is evident not only in executive commentary, but also in consensus estimates for the remainder of the year.
While Materials sector YoY blended earnings growth (combines reported and estimated results) of -20.2% is among the worst performances in the S&P 500 through Q1, surpassed only by Energy (-24.1%) and Healthcare (-24.0%) results, signs of green shoots, specifically volume stabilization, is underpinning consensus estimates of continued growth as the year progresses.
Executives continued to collectively express more optimism about the latter half of 2024 as pockets of restocking begin to emerge. Despite macroeconomic variability across markets and regions, many companies are anticipating conditions to be buoyed by innovation and new product demand, and secular themes in certain sub-industries, such as aerospace, electric vehicles, and infrastructure — all of which are expected to grow faster than the general economy. Still, allegations of import dumping, pricing pressure, and largely improved input costs that are showing signs of reigniting serve as continued headwinds to a sector that has been beleaguered since the first signs of demand deceleration emerged in Q2’22.
Key Earnings Call Themes
Timing of Improving Conditions Remains “Variable” Depending on the End Market, though Many Across the Sector Continue to Express More Optimism toward the Back-Half of 2024
Near-term Weakness Noted for Many in North America, though “Varying Degrees” of Demand Pickup Observed; Inventory Sees “Pockets of Restocking” for Some and “Destocking Coming to an End” for Others
Destocking / Restocking
Amid Continued Constrained Volume, Expense Management and Productivity Initiatives, Including Headcount and Variable Pay Reductions, Remain Intact; Several Point to Future Operating Leverage Amid Eventual Normalized Production Rates
Largely Stabilized and Lower Raws…For Now
Executives Call for Action against Unfair Trade Practices (AKA “Dumping”) Amid Rising Concerns Over Low-Cost Imports from Asia
As we look at the broader landscape and try to read the tea leaves on behalf of our clients this quarter, the Materials sector – a barometer for the economy – is showing signs of slow, but steady stabilization. Indeed, Materials, one of the “canary in the coal mine” sectors, has now moved to a “variable degree” of optimism, a better place than we were last quarter and the boom-and-bust nature that played out from the Covid-induced cycle. However, with many companies exposed to the consumer, progression will most likely be choppy and bounce along versus linear.
Next week, we’ll be back with our Closing the Quarter piece to round out the Q1’24 reporting period. We hope you find our research and insights helpful for staying apprised of what’s happening across economic sectors and as you think through your own company’s positioning.