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    Home > Top Stories > Australia’s bumper earnings get Delta reality check
    Top Stories

    Australia’s bumper earnings get Delta reality check

    Australia’s bumper earnings get Delta reality check

    Published by maria gbaf

    Posted on September 3, 2021

    Featured image for article about Top Stories

    By Paulina Duran

    SYDNEY (Reuters) – An Australian earnings season bonanza for shareholders has masked a more uncertain outlook for the corporate sector as the Delta COVID variant threatens to tip an economy that was surging only months ago back into its second recession in as many years.

    Australian-listed companies delivered a record A$38 billion ($28 billion) in promised dividends to investors in the season that ended this week, driven by banks and mining companies.

    However, when it came to the corporate outlook, companies had much less cheer to offer.

    “Companies really pulled back on giving outlook statements given the uncertainties,” said Brad Potter, the head of Australian Equities at Tyndall Asset Management.

    “I think the resilience of the economy has been amazing but given the situation that we’re in, I don’t think anyone is particularly bullish.”

    Earnings reported by Australia’s top 200 companies in August for the 2021 year came in slightly above expectations, Eikon data shows, even as COVID-19 threw most of the country into lockdown.

    However, with the Delta variant and declines in commodity prices from record highs threatening to tip the economy into a recession, buy-side analysts and investors have downgraded earnings and dividend forecasts.

    Following a whopping 37% increase in aggregate reported earnings by the 156 companies covered by Citigroup in fiscal 2021, the broker cut its forecast for fiscal 2022 by 2.9% to A$124 billion.

    That included a cut of about 5% for the banking sector, due to soft core earnings prospects and about 4% for mining companies, driven by sharp falls in iron ore prices. [IRONORE/]

    Dividend consensus expectations for the year also fell by about 3.1%, according to JPMorgan.

    “It does seem that the upward revision momentum in the near term has slowed down,” Credit Suisse portfolio manager Mike Jenneke said.

    That would still leave a very robust expectation of 16% growth in earnings by Citi this fiscal year, as vaccination rates amongst 25 million Australians increase, and pent-up demand drives an earnings rebound in the second half, particularly in the financials, materials and consumer discretionary sectors.

    By comparison, Reuters data showed profits at U.S. firms are estimated to decline 7.2% in the third quarter, after rising 12.4% in the second quarter.

    On a calendar year basis, global earnings are expected to grow 8% in 2022, after a 46% jump in 2021, according to Credit Suisse.

    In Australia, over A$18 billion worth of share buybacks have been announced on top of the 80% jump in dividends declared during the reporting season, while record M&A is expected to deliver an extra windfall.

    “There’s a whole lot of cash that is going to be hitting investor’s bank accounts over the next few months from those dividends,” said Hugh Dive, Atlas Funds Management Chief Investment Officer.

    “Looking ahead is a bit uncertain, even for the companies that have done very well and are tracking very strong numbers, it’s going to be difficult for them to keep going.”

    Diagnostics firm Sonic Healthcare, whose profit more than doubled to A$1.3 billion, declined to provide earnings guidance saying the pandemic had the “potential to cause fluctuations in both COVID-19 testing revenues and the base business”.

    Others withholding explicit earnings guidance included hospital owner Ramsay Healthcare, retailer Coles Group and waste management firm Cleanaway Waste Management.

    ($1 = 1.3541 Australian dollars)

    (Reporting by Paulina Duran in Sydney; Editing by Sam Holmes)

    By Paulina Duran

    SYDNEY (Reuters) – An Australian earnings season bonanza for shareholders has masked a more uncertain outlook for the corporate sector as the Delta COVID variant threatens to tip an economy that was surging only months ago back into its second recession in as many years.

    Australian-listed companies delivered a record A$38 billion ($28 billion) in promised dividends to investors in the season that ended this week, driven by banks and mining companies.

    However, when it came to the corporate outlook, companies had much less cheer to offer.

    “Companies really pulled back on giving outlook statements given the uncertainties,” said Brad Potter, the head of Australian Equities at Tyndall Asset Management.

    “I think the resilience of the economy has been amazing but given the situation that we’re in, I don’t think anyone is particularly bullish.”

    Earnings reported by Australia’s top 200 companies in August for the 2021 year came in slightly above expectations, Eikon data shows, even as COVID-19 threw most of the country into lockdown.

    However, with the Delta variant and declines in commodity prices from record highs threatening to tip the economy into a recession, buy-side analysts and investors have downgraded earnings and dividend forecasts.

    Following a whopping 37% increase in aggregate reported earnings by the 156 companies covered by Citigroup in fiscal 2021, the broker cut its forecast for fiscal 2022 by 2.9% to A$124 billion.

    That included a cut of about 5% for the banking sector, due to soft core earnings prospects and about 4% for mining companies, driven by sharp falls in iron ore prices. [IRONORE/]

    Dividend consensus expectations for the year also fell by about 3.1%, according to JPMorgan.

    “It does seem that the upward revision momentum in the near term has slowed down,” Credit Suisse portfolio manager Mike Jenneke said.

    That would still leave a very robust expectation of 16% growth in earnings by Citi this fiscal year, as vaccination rates amongst 25 million Australians increase, and pent-up demand drives an earnings rebound in the second half, particularly in the financials, materials and consumer discretionary sectors.

    By comparison, Reuters data showed profits at U.S. firms are estimated to decline 7.2% in the third quarter, after rising 12.4% in the second quarter.

    On a calendar year basis, global earnings are expected to grow 8% in 2022, after a 46% jump in 2021, according to Credit Suisse.

    In Australia, over A$18 billion worth of share buybacks have been announced on top of the 80% jump in dividends declared during the reporting season, while record M&A is expected to deliver an extra windfall.

    “There’s a whole lot of cash that is going to be hitting investor’s bank accounts over the next few months from those dividends,” said Hugh Dive, Atlas Funds Management Chief Investment Officer.

    “Looking ahead is a bit uncertain, even for the companies that have done very well and are tracking very strong numbers, it’s going to be difficult for them to keep going.”

    Diagnostics firm Sonic Healthcare, whose profit more than doubled to A$1.3 billion, declined to provide earnings guidance saying the pandemic had the “potential to cause fluctuations in both COVID-19 testing revenues and the base business”.

    Others withholding explicit earnings guidance included hospital owner Ramsay Healthcare, retailer Coles Group and waste management firm Cleanaway Waste Management.

    ($1 = 1.3541 Australian dollars)

    (Reporting by Paulina Duran in Sydney; Editing by Sam Holmes)

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