Commodities & Metals
Alcoa Earnings: A Mixed Harbinger for This Earnings Season
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Alcoa Inc. (NYSE: AA) is no longer a Dow Jones Industrial Average component, but it is still the first of the large earnings reports. Prior to Tuesday, the aluminum giant’s shares were down about 5% or so from its high of the year. The flip-side is that Alcoa shares were still up by more than 17% since the end of 2013.
The aluminum leader’s earnings came in at $0.09 per share and $5.45 billion in revenue. Thomson Reuters had estimates of $0.05 in earnings per share and $5.55 billion in revenue. The whisper number ahead of earnings was for earnings to be $0.07 or even $0.08 per share. For comparison, earnings were $0.04 EPS in the last quarter sequentially and $0.11 EPS in the same quarter a year ago. The net loss after items was $178 million, or -$0.16 per share. Alcoa also signaled that aluminum prices were down 8% from a year ago.
Alcoa ended with $665 million in cash on hand.
Alcoa does not give guidance until its conference call. The consensus estimates for the quarter ahead are $0.10 in earnings per share and $5.75 billion in revenue. In case we get guidance for the year – Thomson Reuters has the consensus estimates for 2014 as $0.37 in earnings per share (versus $0.33 in 2013) and revenue of $23.04 billion (flat versus 2013).
For the individual business , Alcoa showed the following data:
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Alcoa shares closed up 6-cents at $12.53 against a 52-week range of $7.63 to $13.18. Shares were initially up 1.1% at $12.67 after the report, but we would consider this report as unfinished business until its guidance is seen. Its consensus price target ahead of the formal earnings report was $10.73 per share, but here is why Sterne Agee said Alcoa could rise to $15.
Again, Alcoa is used as a harbinger of what to expect from most companies tied to the economy. That may not be a fair expectation, but that is how Wall Street treats this company. If the pre-earnings barometer is true, then Alcoa left investors with the thought that earnings can be beat but on weak numbers and on weak sales.
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