After a nervy year America Inc has a bounce in its step
The corporate earnings recession may be over. But risks loom
IS THE EARNINGS recession over? Many observers of corporate life have been asking this question as America’s listed companies report last quarter’s results in January and February. The omens going into the decade’s first earnings season did not look good. The current expansion is the longest in American history, so a downturn seemed inevitable. Indeed, the first three quarters of 2019 saw year-on-year declines in earnings for the S&P 500 index of leading firms. Financial analysts had forecast another drop, of 2% or so, in the fourth, marking the first such prolonged malaise since 2015-16, when America suffered a manufacturing slump.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Goldilocks and the three bears”
Business February 8th 2020
- After a nervy year America Inc has a bounce in its step
- Tesla gains $60bn in market value in a week
- Talk of succession atop Big Tech grows louder
- How modern workers are at the mercy of ratings
- Why India’s annual budget is a powerful market force
- Gold companies try to restore their sparkle
- Away from the headlines, defence is Boeing’s next problem
More from Business
DeepSeek sends a shockwave through markets
A cheap Chinese language model has investors in Silicon Valley asking questions
Germans are world champions of calling in sick
It’s easy and it pays well
Knowing what your colleagues earn
The pros and cons of greater pay transparency
A $500bn investment plan says a lot about Trump’s AI priorities
It’s build, baby, build
Donald Trump’s America will not become a tech oligarchy
Reasons not to panic about the tech-industrial complex
OpenAI’s latest model will change the economics of software
The more reasoning it does, the more computer power it uses