Two stocks that have defined Wall Street’s boom in the past decade — streaming giant Netflix Inc. and electric-vehicle maker Tesla Inc. — will hope to turn around some poor recent trajectories as earnings season kicks into a new gear this week.
After swelling prices and results from JPMorgan Chase & Co.
JPM,
and Delta Air Lines Inc.
DAL,
set the tone last week, Wall Street in the week ahead will turn to quarterly results from Netflix
NFLX,
on Tuesday and Tesla
TSLA,
on Wednesday.
Tesla
TSLA,
will report results after weaker-than-expected deliveries during the quarter, amid Chief Executive Elon Musk’s ongoing legal wrangling from his promised purchase of Twitter Inc.
TWTR,
Netflix
NFLX,
reports after launching new ad-supported options and cutting jobs amid concerns about competition and subscriber growth.
Both stocks have suffered this year after huge gains in previous years. Tesla shares have declined more than 41% so far in 2022, largely thanks to a drop of more than 30% in the past month; Netflix is down more than 60% this year, while the S&P 500 index
SPX,
has fallen 23%.
Netflix executives have been attempting to turn around their most dramatic pause in subscriber growth since splitting their streaming service from the DVD-by-mail business. They announced Thursday that a new ad-supported tier will launch in November — beating rival Walt Disney Co.
DIS,
to the offering by roughly a month — and are still hoping to leverage a crackdown on password sharing as well as engagement plays such as mobile videogames within the app.
Full earnings preview: Netflix lost its streaming crown to Disney. Here’s how execs expect to win it back.
Benchmark Research analyst Matthew Harrigan, in a research note on Thursday, said he was skeptical of the prospect of an immediate ad-led turnaround for Netflix, even as series like “Stranger Things” and “Dahmer” draw viewers.
“Macro timing for a new advertising service is … not favorable,” he said.
Tesla reports third-quarter earnings on Wednesday, after reporting third-quarter deliveries of more than 343,000 — a record that was nonetheless below analysts’ expectations for 371,000 — along with record monthly sales of vehicles produced in China in September. The gap between those deliveries and the total amount of vehicles produced, more than 365,000, could raise questions about whether Tesla is hitting a demand slump, though the company attributed the gap to difficulties locking down vehicle transportation “at a reasonable cost during these peak logistics weeks.”
Full earnings preview: Do Tesla’s record deliveries mask a demand problem?
“While the reasoning (in the PR) from Tesla makes sense on paper, the Street will not be convinced and lingering worries about demand issues will persist until we hear about year-end unit guidance on Tesla’s conference call,” Wedbush analyst Daniel Ives said a research note this month.
Positive reports from Tesla and Netflix could help to turn around some disappointments early in earnings season, which has led analysts to bring down their expectations for growth in the quarter. FactSet Senior Earnings Analyst John Butters reported Friday that expectations for 2.8% growth at the end of the second quarter have already slid to 1.6% two weeks into the third quarter, with a lower percentage of companies topping expectations so far.
Only 7% of companies in the S&P 500 have reported so far, though, a number that will start growing quickly in the week ahead. There are 66 S&P 500 companies expected to report, and eight of the 30 Dow Jones Industrial Average components are on the docket: Johnson & Johnson
JNJ,
and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. on Tuesday
GS,
; International Business Machines Corp.
IBM,
Procter & Gamble Co.
PG,
and Travelers Co. Inc.
TRV,
on Wednesday; Dow Inc.
DOW,
on Thursday; and American Express Co.
AXP,
and Verizon Communications Inc.
VZ,
on Friday morning.
The call to put on your calendar
Snap Inc.: Snapchat’s parent company reports third-quarter earnings on Thursday, and analysts expect the company’s losses to nearly quintuple from last year and revenue growth to slow to nearly nothing. That is a huge reversal for Snap’s trajectory, because digital advertising has suffered as advertisers, more cautious of a recession, rein in spending.
As the first major social-media company to report, the color from Chief Executive Evan Spiegel and other executives will be very important as investors look for any signs of hope for the holiday quarter. Snap’s
SNAP,
results could give investors a read on the struggling digital-ad market, ahead of results from Twitter
TWTR,
Meta Platforms Inc.’s
META,
Facebook and Google parent Alphabet Inc.
GOOGL,
a week later.
The numbers to watch
iPhone demand at the telecom giants: AT&T Inc.
T,
and Verizon Communications Inc.
VZ,
results will offer early clues on demand for Apple Inc.’s
AAPL,
iPhone 14, after a round of heavy promotions from the wireless carriers. There is plenty to pay attention to for telecom companies — AT&T has noted that consumers have taken a bit longer to pay their phone bills, but executives stressed that customers were still paying them. Investors will also be looking for more context on demand trends at Verizon after the company raised prices on some plans. AT&T results are expected Thursday, and Verizon will follow the next morning.
Airlines’ revenue: After Delta showed a significant sales gain from prepandemic levels, investors will be looking for the same from other airlines as United Airlines Holdings Inc.
UAL,
American Airlines Group Inc.
AAL,
and Alaska Air Group Inc.
ALK,
report in the coming week.
In-depth: The holiday-shopping season has a different problem this year than supply gaps — and it could lead to some deals
“We expect revenue tailwinds observed at Delta to also be pronounced at United,” Raymond James analyst Savanthi Syth wrote in a Friday note. “To a lesser extent, American and JetBlue should also benefit due to large corporate and trans-Atlantic exposure at the former and large coastal city exposure at the latter.”
Hasbro and toy demand: Earnings from toy maker Hasbro Inc.
HAS,
could offer detail on holiday demand, amid analyst expectations for a wave of discounting for the season, as retailers try to clear inventories following a shift in consumer demand to more expensive basic goods. Rival Mattel Inc.
MAT,
will report the next week.
MarketWatch staff writer Emily Bary contributed to this article.
Two stocks that have defined Wall Street’s boom in the past decade — streaming giant Netflix Inc. and electric-vehicle maker Tesla Inc. — will hope to turn around some poor recent trajectories as earnings season kicks into a new gear this week.
After swelling prices and results from JPMorgan Chase & Co.
JPM,
and Delta Air Lines Inc.
DAL,
set the tone last week, Wall Street in the week ahead will turn to quarterly results from Netflix
NFLX,
on Tuesday and Tesla
TSLA,
on Wednesday.
Tesla
TSLA,
will report results after weaker-than-expected deliveries during the quarter, amid Chief Executive Elon Musk’s ongoing legal wrangling from his promised purchase of Twitter Inc.
TWTR,
Netflix
NFLX,
reports after launching new ad-supported options and cutting jobs amid concerns about competition and subscriber growth.
Both stocks have suffered this year after huge gains in previous years. Tesla shares have declined more than 41% so far in 2022, largely thanks to a drop of more than 30% in the past month; Netflix is down more than 60% this year, while the S&P 500 index
SPX,
has fallen 23%.
Netflix executives have been attempting to turn around their most dramatic pause in subscriber growth since splitting their streaming service from the DVD-by-mail business. They announced Thursday that a new ad-supported tier will launch in November — beating rival Walt Disney Co.
DIS,
to the offering by roughly a month — and are still hoping to leverage a crackdown on password sharing as well as engagement plays such as mobile videogames within the app.
Full earnings preview: Netflix lost its streaming crown to Disney. Here’s how execs expect to win it back.
Benchmark Research analyst Matthew Harrigan, in a research note on Thursday, said he was skeptical of the prospect of an immediate ad-led turnaround for Netflix, even as series like “Stranger Things” and “Dahmer” draw viewers.
“Macro timing for a new advertising service is … not favorable,” he said.
Tesla reports third-quarter earnings on Wednesday, after reporting third-quarter deliveries of more than 343,000 — a record that was nonetheless below analysts’ expectations for 371,000 — along with record monthly sales of vehicles produced in China in September. The gap between those deliveries and the total amount of vehicles produced, more than 365,000, could raise questions about whether Tesla is hitting a demand slump, though the company attributed the gap to difficulties locking down vehicle transportation “at a reasonable cost during these peak logistics weeks.”
Full earnings preview: Do Tesla’s record deliveries mask a demand problem?
“While the reasoning (in the PR) from Tesla makes sense on paper, the Street will not be convinced and lingering worries about demand issues will persist until we hear about year-end unit guidance on Tesla’s conference call,” Wedbush analyst Daniel Ives said a research note this month.
Positive reports from Tesla and Netflix could help to turn around some disappointments early in earnings season, which has led analysts to bring down their expectations for growth in the quarter. FactSet Senior Earnings Analyst John Butters reported Friday that expectations for 2.8% growth at the end of the second quarter have already slid to 1.6% two weeks into the third quarter, with a lower percentage of companies topping expectations so far.
Only 7% of companies in the S&P 500 have reported so far, though, a number that will start growing quickly in the week ahead. There are 66 S&P 500 companies expected to report, and eight of the 30 Dow Jones Industrial Average components are on the docket: Johnson & Johnson
JNJ,
and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. on Tuesday
GS,
; International Business Machines Corp.
IBM,
Procter & Gamble Co.
PG,
and Travelers Co. Inc.
TRV,
on Wednesday; Dow Inc.
DOW,
on Thursday; and American Express Co.
AXP,
and Verizon Communications Inc.
VZ,
on Friday morning.
The call to put on your calendar
Snap Inc.: Snapchat’s parent company reports third-quarter earnings on Thursday, and analysts expect the company’s losses to nearly quintuple from last year and revenue growth to slow to nearly nothing. That is a huge reversal for Snap’s trajectory, because digital advertising has suffered as advertisers, more cautious of a recession, rein in spending.
As the first major social-media company to report, the color from Chief Executive Evan Spiegel and other executives will be very important as investors look for any signs of hope for the holiday quarter. Snap’s
SNAP,
results could give investors a read on the struggling digital-ad market, ahead of results from Twitter
TWTR,
Meta Platforms Inc.’s
META,
Facebook and Google parent Alphabet Inc.
GOOGL,
a week later.
The numbers to watch
iPhone demand at the telecom giants: AT&T Inc.
T,
and Verizon Communications Inc.
VZ,
results will offer early clues on demand for Apple Inc.’s
AAPL,
iPhone 14, after a round of heavy promotions from the wireless carriers. There is plenty to pay attention to for telecom companies — AT&T has noted that consumers have taken a bit longer to pay their phone bills, but executives stressed that customers were still paying them. Investors will also be looking for more context on demand trends at Verizon after the company raised prices on some plans. AT&T results are expected Thursday, and Verizon will follow the next morning.
Airlines’ revenue: After Delta showed a significant sales gain from prepandemic levels, investors will be looking for the same from other airlines as United Airlines Holdings Inc.
UAL,
American Airlines Group Inc.
AAL,
and Alaska Air Group Inc.
ALK,
report in the coming week.
In-depth: The holiday-shopping season has a different problem this year than supply gaps — and it could lead to some deals
“We expect revenue tailwinds observed at Delta to also be pronounced at United,” Raymond James analyst Savanthi Syth wrote in a Friday note. “To a lesser extent, American and JetBlue should also benefit due to large corporate and trans-Atlantic exposure at the former and large coastal city exposure at the latter.”
Hasbro and toy demand: Earnings from toy maker Hasbro Inc.
HAS,
could offer detail on holiday demand, amid analyst expectations for a wave of discounting for the season, as retailers try to clear inventories following a shift in consumer demand to more expensive basic goods. Rival Mattel Inc.
MAT,
will report the next week.
MarketWatch staff writer Emily Bary contributed to this article.