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Earnings Previews: Abbott Labs, AT&T, Boeing, Freeport-McMoRan
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We have well and truly arrived at the December-quarter earnings reporting season. Hundreds of results are due out this week, including those from the two largest U.S. tech firms.
Netflix, which fell by 22% on Friday, was down another 3.1% in early trading Monday morning, and Halliburton, which beat on both the top and bottom lines and raised its dividend from 4.5 cents to 12 cents per share, traded lower by about 2.2%. It was a mean old world again.
We already have previewed four companies that will report earnings before markets open Tuesday (American Express, General Electric, Johnson & Johnson and 3M) and four more also scheduled to report results before Tuesday’s opening bell (Lockheed Martin, NextEra Energy, Raytheon and Verizon). And Monday morning, we posted previews of four firms reporting results after markets close on Tuesday (Capital One, Microsoft, Navient and Texas Instruments).
Here is a look at four companies scheduled to report results first thing Wednesday morning.
Medical device and generic drug maker Abbott Laboratories (NYSE: ABT) added about 9.5% to its share price over the past 12 months, including a dive of around 14 percentage points since late December. The company has beaten sales estimates in three of the past four quarters and EPS estimates in all four. Shares are trading at about the same level as they were late last July. The company’s Binax COVID-19 tests lead in market share, but investors appear to be waiting to see what the coronavirus will do next.
Among 22 analysts covering the stock, 17 have given the stock a Buy or Strong Buy rating, and three more rate the stock at Hold. The consensus price target is $144.50, and with shares trading at around $121.70, the upside potential is 18.7%. At the high target of $1578, the upside potential increases to 29%.
Fourth-quarter revenue is forecast to slide by about 2% sequentially to $10.71 billion, which would be roughly flat year over year. Adjusted earnings per share (EPS) are forecast at $1.21, down about 13.8% sequentially and 16.6% lower year over year. For the full 2021 fiscal year, analysts are looking for EPS of $5.06, up about 38.5%, on revenue of $42.21 billion, up 22%.
Abbott stock trades at about 24.0 times expected 2021 EPS, 25.5 times estimated 2022 earnings of $4.75 and 23.5 times estimated 2023 earnings of $5.17 per share. The stock’s 52-week range is $105.36 to $142.6, and the company pays an annual dividend of $1.88 (yield of 1.49%). Total shareholder return for the past 12 months was 9.2%.
Following a spike in early May, shares of AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T) tumbled by 30% through mid-December. Since the beginning of the year, the stock is up more than 8%, even after dropping more than four points in the past four trading sessions. Even worse for shareholders is the company’s plan to cut its rich dividend.
Sentiment on the stock is decidedly cool. Of 28 brokerages covering the stock, 15 have a Hold rating on the stock while two more rate the shares at Sell. The rest have Buy or Strong Buy ratings. At a share price of around $26.00, the implied upside based on a median price target of $30 is 13.3%. At the high price target of $42, the upside potential is about 57.7%.
Fourth-quarter revenue is forecast at $40.45 billion, up 1.3% sequentially but down 11.5% year over year. Adjusted EPS are forecast at $0.76, down 13% sequentially and up a penny year over year. For full fiscal 2021, EPS is expected to come in at $3.34, up 5.1%, on sales of $168.42 billion, down about 2%.
AT&T stock trades at about 7.8 times expected 2021 EPS, 8.1 times estimated 2022 earnings of $3.20 and 7.8 times estimated 2023 earnings of $3.33. The stock’s 52-week range is $22.02 to $33.88. AT&T’s current annual dividend is $2.08 (yield of 7.28%). Total shareholder return for the past 12 months was negative 3.2%.
Since reaching a 12-month high in mid-March of last year, shares of Boeing Co. (NYSE: BA) are down nearly 28%. Not a bad recovery, considering the stock fell by about $250 per share in just over one month in 2020. Less than two weeks ago, Boeing stock traded up nearly 10% over the 12-month period.
The company delivered 340 commercial jets in 2021, up from 99 deliveries in 2020. The company’s best-selling 737 family accounted for 263 (77%) of those deliveries. Regulatory holds on shipments of new 787 Dreamliners remain to be resolved before revenue picks up and the company’s newest twin-aisle jet, the 777X, likely will not receive regulatory approval to fly until the middle of next year.
Of the 22 analysts covering the stock, 15 have a Buy or Strong Buy rating, while five rate the shares at Hold. At a share price of around $195.100, the implied upside based on a median price target of $270 is 38.4%. At the high target of $306, the implied upside is about 56.8%.
Consensus estimates call for fourth-quarter revenue of $16.64 billion, up 8.9% sequentially and about 8.8% year over year. Analysts forecast a quarterly loss per share of $0.19, compared to a loss of $0.60 per share in the prior quarter and a loss per share of $15.25 last year. For fiscal 2021 year, the Dow Jones industrial average component is projected to post a per-share loss of $1.90, compared to last year’s loss per share of $23.25. Revenue is expected to increase by nearly 11% to $64.36 billion.
Boeing stock trades at about 42.0 times expected 2022 earnings of $4.64 and 24.2 times estimated 2023 earnings of $8.04 per share. The stock’s 52-week range is $185.26 to $278.57. Boeing has suspended its dividend, and total shareholder return for the past year was negative 5.7%.
Over the past 12 months, shares of copper and gold miner Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (NYSE: FCX) had added about 36% as of last Friday’s closing bell. With the stock down more than 7% Monday morning, the 12-month gain has been pared to about 25.6%. Gold prices are down about 1.3% over the same period, while copper prices are up about 21.5%, well below the 35% gain achieved in October. While copper prices are a bit lower, they are no longer falling and may even be improving somewhat.
Of 20 analysts covering the stock, 12 have a Buy or Strong Buy rating on the shares and another five have a Hold rating. At a share price of around $37.80, the upside potential based on a median price target of $47 is 24.3%. At the high price target of $50, the upside potential reaches 33.3%.
Fourth-quarter revenue is forecast at $6.47 billion, up more than 6% sequentially and around 44% year over year. Adjusted EPS are forecast at $0.91, up 2.1% sequentially and 133% higher year over year. For the full 2021 fiscal year, analysts are expecting EPS of $3.08, up 470%, on sales of $23.11 billion, up nearly 63%.
Freeport stock trades at about 12.2 times expected 2021 EPS, 10.7 times estimated 2022 earnings of $3.52 and 11.8 times estimated 2023 earnings of $3.20. The stock’s 52-week range is $24.71 to $46.20. The company pays an annual dividend of $0.30 (yield of 0.73%). Total shareholder return for the past 12 months was 25.1%.
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