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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Consumer mood next week’s focus

Joe Bel Bruno Associated Press

NEW YORK – Wall Street has so far had a mostly subdued reaction to corporate earnings released in the past few weeks, but that could soon change.

Just about halfway through the first-quarter reporting season, most of the blue chips that make up the Standard & Poor’s 500 index have not pulled any surprises. In fact, stripping out the gloom coming from financial companies like Merrill Lynch & Co. or Citigroup Inc., profits are up 11 percent year-over-year.

With this generally good performance, the market hasn’t had the kind of turbulence some feared before the start of earnings season, and the S&P 500 index has risen about 4 percent in the past two weeks.

But the coming week might change the market’s dynamics, as a string of consumer-oriented companies including electronics stores and food companies are scheduled to release their results. Wall Street is worried about slowing consumer spending, and these companies might give investors their best indication yet about how much Americans are willing to spend these days.

“We’ve pieced together a decent earnings season so far, and everybody handicapped the financials out of the market,” said Chris Johnson, president of Johnson Research Group. “Now the companies that represent the activities of the consumer are going to fall in the cross hairs, and that can tell us more about where this economy is heading.”

Still, Wall Street has some newfound strength going for it – even when investors have encountered disappointing results in recent weeks, the market has been able to right itself.

When General Electric Co. reported an unexpected 6 percent drop in profit, the news unnerved investors worried that the financial crisis that gutted investment banks had begun to spread. GE is considered a good indicator of the economy because it has businesses across a number of big sectors.

The Dow Jones industrials tumbled in response to the report on April 11, but in the following two weeks, investors have stepped back and have been able to examine earnings results as a whole. Though financial companies have so far left the S&P 500’s profit growth at a negative 13 percent, there are still more companies beating Wall Street projections than not.

“We really have two sides to this earnings season between the financials and everyone else,” said Howard Silverblatt, Standard & Poor’s senior index analyst. “And, if we continue this positive news across the board people are going to feel a lot better that we’ll have a much better second half. But, we have to get through those consumer discretionary companies.”

Indeed, these companies are closely watched because they give Wall Street a glimpse of consumer spending, which contributes to two-thirds of the U.S. economy. Any sharp pullback could have disastrous effects.

Right now, the companies in this sector that have already reported results show a 6.8 percent decline in profits. This is shaping up to be their fifth-straight quarter of down earnings.