The three major U.S. equity indexes closed higher on Monday, with the Dow Jones industrials and the S&P 500 up nearly 2%, while the Nasdaq was up 1.6%. Financial sector stocks rose 3.3% after JPMorgan lifted its outlook on net interest income. All 11 sectors closed higher, with consumer staples (the traditional defensive play when markets are lousy) up more than 2%.
After markets closed on Monday, Zoom Video reported a solid beat on first-quarter earnings and an in-line number for revenue. Zoom also raised guidance. Shares traded up more than 6% in Tuesday’s premarket.
Before markets opened on Tuesday, Abercrombie & Fitch missed analysts’ profit estimate and beat the estimate for quarterly revenue. Downside guidance for the current quarter and the fiscal year knocked the stock down nearly 30%.
Best Buy beat the earnings estimate by a penny and also beat on revenue. It lowered fiscal year guidance as well. Shares traded down about 2.5% in Tuesday’s premarket.
Frontline reported an in-line loss per share and hammered revenue estimates. The stock traded up about 5.5%.
NetEase beat estimates on both the top and bottom lines. The stock traded up about 3.6%.
Petco also beat estimates on the top and bottom lines and confirmed previous guidance. Shares traded up about 2.5% in Tuesday’s premarket.
After markets close on Tuesday, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Intuit and Toll Brothers will report quarterly earnings, along with Grindrod, Nordstrom and Star Bulk Carriers.
Here is a look at three firms set to report earnings after Wednesday’s closing bell.
Nvidia
Shares of Nvidia Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA) are up about 13% over the past 12 months, including a slide of 48% from its 52-week high posted in late November. Nvidia has slowed its hiring pace, and analysts expect a big quarter based on the company’s own outlook comments at the end of the prior quarter.
At the Computex computer show in Taipei Monday, Nvidia took the wraps off its Arm-based Grace CPU Superchip and the Grace Hopper CPU+GPU Superchip. The Grace CPU will hit the market early in 2023, and Nvidia claims it will be the fastest processor out there.
Of 44 analysts covering the stock, 35 have a Buy or Strong Buy rating and another eight have Hold ratings. At a recent share price of around $169.00, the upside potential based on a median price target of $330.00 is 95.3%. At the high price target of $410.00, the upside potential is 142.6%.
For its first quarter of fiscal 2023, Nvidia’s revenue is forecast at $8.09 billion, which would be up 5.9% sequentially and 42.9% higher year over year. Adjusted earnings per share (EPS) are forecast at $1.29, down 1.9% sequentially but up 40.2% year over year. For the full fiscal year ending in January, analysts are looking for EPS of $5.63, up 26.9%, on sales of $34.72 billion, up 29%.
Nvidia stock trades at 30.0 times expected 2023 EPS, 25.0 times estimated 2024 earnings of $6.75 and 19.4 times estimated 2025 earnings of $8.69 per share. The stock’s 52-week trading range is $151.76 to $346.47. The company pays an annual dividend of $0.16 (yield of 0.1%). Total shareholder return for the past year was 11.4%.
Snowflake
Over the past 12 months, cloud-based data platform provider Snowflake Inc. (NYSE: SNOW) has seen its share price plunge by more than 40%. The stock hit an all-time high in mid-November and has dropped more than 65% since. Like virtually every other growth company, the risk-off mood on Wall Street has hit investors in Snowflake. Salesforce.com, which had purchased $250 million in Snowflake stock at the 2020 initial public offering, sold most of its stake in the company last year and announced earlier this month that it had sold the last 5%.
Despite the plummeting stock price, analyst sentiment remains positive. Of 31 brokerages covering the stock, eight rate the shares a Hold and 22 have a Buy or Strong Buy rating. At a share price of around $141.50, the upside potential based on a median price target of $280.00 is 98%. At the high price target of $530.00, the upside potential is 275%.
Fiscal first-quarter revenue is forecast at $413.01 million, up 7.6% sequentially and 80% year over year. Snowflake is expected to post break-even earnings in the quarter, down from $0.12 per share sequentially but better than the loss of $0.11 per share a year ago. For full fiscal 2023, which ends in January, Snowflake is currently expected to post adjusted EPS of $0.16, up from the year-ago EPS of $0.01, on sales of $2.03 billion, up 66.4%.
Snowflake stock trades at 299.0 times expected 2024 earnings of $0.46 and 139.4 times estimated 2025 earnings of $1.00 per share. The stock’s 52-week range is $126.01 to $405.00. The company does not pay a dividend, and the total shareholder return for the past year was negative 39.4%.
Splunk
Shares of real-time data collection and reporting platform Splunk Inc. (NASDAQ: SPLK) have dropped about 16.8% over the past 12 months. New CEO Gary Steele arrived on the scene in mid-April with a remit to lead the company’s growth. A report that Cisco was considering an acquisition of Splunk gave the stock a boost in February, but when the rumor failed to pan out, shares dipped again.
Analysts are bullish on the stock, with 24 of 39 giving Splunk a Buy or Strong Buy rating and the rest rating the shares at Hold. At a price of around $98.90 a share, the upside potential based on a median price target of $151.00 is 52.7%. At the high price target of $225.00, the upside potential is nearly 128%.
For the first quarter of fiscal 2023, which ended in April, Splunk is expected to post revenue of $629.73 million, down 30.1% sequentially, but 25.4% higher year over year. The estimated adjusted loss per share is $0.75, much worse than the prior quarter’s profit of $0.66 per share but below the year-ago loss per share of $0.91. For the full fiscal year, Splunk is expected to report a loss per share of $0.09, compared to last year’s loss of $1.25 per share, on sales of $3.28 billion, up 22.6%.
Splunk stock trades at 100.1 times expected 2024 earnings of $0.89 and 42.6 times estimated 2025 earnings of $2.31 per share. The stock’s 52-week range is $84.63 to $176.66. The company does not pay a dividend, and the total shareholder return for the past year was negative 16.2%.
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