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Wall Street braces for souring corporate earnings amid trade war

by Yurie Miyazawa
in Leadership
Wall Street braces for souring corporate earnings amid trade war
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[NEW YORK] US stocks reeling from the impact of President Donald Trump’s tariffs face another big test starting later this week: corporate earnings. And they’re not looking good.  

Investors have already chopped more than US$5 trillion off the value of companies in the S&P 500 Index over the last three sessions as they fret that an escalating trade war risks slashing profits. Across Wall Street, analysts are echoing that gloomy take as worries mount that the economy is headed for a recession.

For the first quarter, analysts now see year-over-year earnings growth of 6.7 per cent for the S&P 500, down from about 11.1 per cent in early November when Trump was elected, according to data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligence. For all of 2025, they see profits rising 9.4 per cent, compared with a projection of 12.5 per cent at the beginning of the year.

“With all this tariff uncertainty, when companies start reporting their results, the risk for the earnings outlook is definitely to the downside,” said Sarah Hunt, chief market strategist and partner of Alpine Saxon Woods. 

Earnings season kicks off Friday with announcements from big US banks including JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo. 

Trump’s tariffs are threatening to upend multinational companies’ supply chains and weigh on export demand. Meanwhile, recession fears are shaking consumer confidence.

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UBS Investment Bank’s chief strategist Bhanu Baweja said Monday tariffs could hit consumers so hard that there’s a risk that S&P 500 companies will see zero earnings growth this year. 

Corporate America’s profit outlooks began to sour even before Trump unleashed a litany of levies on US trading partners. As of the fourth-quarter earnings cycle, the ratio of companies issuing earnings forecasts for 2025 that beat expectations versus those that fell short hit the lowest since 2010, BI data show.

When companies start reporting they “won’t have anything they can actually say other than that everything is so uncertain,” said Joe Gilbert, portfolio manager at Integrity Asset Management. “We’ve gone from the fog of a trade war to the fog of the earnings outlook.”   

Investors will be keeping a close eye on operating margins as they indicate if companies can successfully pass rising costs on to consumers. Margin forecasts for the first quarter are currently sitting at 15.6 per cent, down from the level of 16 per cent seen in January, BI data show.

But those expectations may be too optimistic, according to Dave Mazza, chief executive officer of Roundhill Financial.

“A big risk to further downside in the US stocks is that operating margins come down due to the tariffs,” Mazza said. 

Meanwhile, sentiment toward the so-called Magnificent Seven shares which drove stock-market gains for much of the past two years is also dimming as investors turn skeptical. The cohort’s net income is expected to hit the lowest level since the first quarter of 2023, according to BI.

“If these companies disappoint or give more clarity in a negative way around data centres or capital spending on AI, that’s going to point to further weakness in the stocks,” said Mazza. BLOOMBERG

Tags: BracesCorporateEarningsSouringStreetTradeWallWar
Yurie Miyazawa

Yurie Miyazawa

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US: Wall Street opens sharply higher on hopes of tariff talks

US: Wall Street opens sharply higher on hopes of tariff talks

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