Earnings weeks are intense made even more exciting by the administration’s rapid-fire announcements, and we all long for today – the weekend’s eve – to recharge.
We analyzed annual revenue and EPS guidance for a basket of selected U.S. Materials companies with market caps greater than $1B that have reported to date.1 Below are our findings.
For comparison purposes, we provide an “All-Company” benchmark, which tracks in real-time a basket of calendar year companies larger than $1B in market cap across all sectors that have reported earnings to date (n = 315).
Industry | Number of Companies |
---|---|
Specialty Chemicals | 9 |
Packaging & Containers | 5 |
Construction Materials | 1 |
Metals & Mining | 1 |
Total | 16 |
Revenue: 50% Narrowed spreads relative to last year, 13% more than observed in the All-Company benchmark, followed by 33% Widening guidance; 67% of midpoints are above 2024 actuals
EPS: 60% Narrowed spreads relative to last year, nearly three-times the All-Company benchmark (23%); 93% of midpoints are above 2024 actuals
We analyzed the earnings calls for this group and the broader Materials sector universe to identify key themes.
Commodity Price Movements
This earnings season, executives remain mixed and acknowledge a still challenging operating environment, citing continued limited visibility across most end markets. While certain pockets — such as data center infrastructure — continue to show strength, residential construction, auto, and consumer-facing markets remain sluggish – this echoes executive commentary from our Industrial and Consumer Sector Beats. Companies maintain hope for improved conditions later in 2025, but few are willing to make firm calls on the timing of a demand recovery.
Furthermore, companies continue to navigate a complex pricing environment. While some note benefits from input cost deflation, others — particularly in Europe — face pricing pressure due to overcapacity and soft demand. In response, firms are prioritizing cost discipline, efficiency gains, and productivity initiatives to protect margins and sustain profitability.
Trade and industrial policy continue to garner outsized attention on calls, with executives increasingly discussing the impact of tariffs and the potential for reshoring and nearshoring. Across the sector, companies generally see their localized supply chains providing insulation from trade disruptions, though some anticipate higher domestic manufacturing investment as a second-order effect.
Overall, the Materials sector continues to lag broader S&P 500 earnings performance, delivering lower EPS beat rates and standing out as one of only two sectors (along with Energy) reporting negative YoY earnings growth (blended — estimated and reported) for Q4’24. While some executives express guarded optimism for an improving backdrop later this year, the near-term picture remains cloudy, and companies are maintaining sharp focus on cost control and execution.
Key Themes
‘Fundamentals Remain Constructive’, though Visibility is ‘Not Very Good’; Many are Hoping for Improvement as the Year Progresses
Trends Reveal Choppiness and Consumer Caution across Most End Markets, Particularly Chemicals and Residential Construction, with Expectations of Flat to Modest Recovery in Upcoming Quarters; Those Tied to Data Center Buildouts Remain a Notable Bright Spot
Dynamics Are Mixed across the Sector; Where Pricing Remains Under Pressure, Execs Emphasize Improved Input Costs and Efficiency Efforts as Offsets
Executives Highlight Robust Local Supply Chains Minimizing Potential Tariff Impacts; Anticipation Surrounding Reshoring and Nearshoring Gains Momentum
Reshoring/Nearshoring
Our analysis reveals the fundamentals of the Materials sector remain challenged albeit at uneven levels, characterized by general consumer caution, mixed volume trends, and anemic earnings growth. While certain pockets of strength exist — particularly in areas tied to technological and infrastructure-related advancements, as well as onshoring efforts in response to tariff concerns — a broad-based recovery remains elusive. To that end, although some industry leaders are earmarking 2025 as a year of progressive improvement, most acknowledge that near-term conditions remain difficult and clouded by uncertainty.
In the meantime, we’ll be back next week with an earnings snapshot and key events, followed by our Closing the Quarter piece to round out the Q4 and Full Year 2024 reporting period.