Many experts thought the country was doomed to go into a recession after the inflation spike in 2022. The people in charge today don’t seem to be as worried.
According to a FactSet analysis, the number of S&P 500 companies that used the word “recession” dropped to its lowest level since the fourth quarter of 2021. That’s when the crazy reopening of the economy after the pandemic messed up the job market and the world’s shipping infrastructure while huge corporate profit margins were made.
FactSet found that 29 of these companies used the word “recession” on those recent calls. The research shows that’s a lot less than the average for the last five and ten years.
In 2022, “recession” talk on earnings calls became more common after Russia attacked Ukraine and food prices went through the roof. This made people worry that price increases in stores and the Federal Reserve’s plan for overall inflation—higher interest rates—might be too much for consumers to handle. But since then, the subject has come up less on those talks.
The U.S. economy has kept surprising people who think it will fail. More than expected, it added 272,000 new jobs in May.
The plan for earnings next week, on the other hand, will be lighter. It will, however, show how the housing market is doing and how much desire there is for AI outside of the biggest tech companies.
The call to put on your calendar
RH and the home market:The rebound of the furniture industry depends a lot on how the housing market is doing. The market has been frozen because of high interest rates, mortgages, and home prices. Rich people may be the ones to lead the rebound. They are more likely to buy Belgian flax-linen sofas and European white oak sideboards at the high-end furniture store RH RH, -3.85%, which reports Thursday. The chain has said that the current market is “the most challenging housing market in thirty years.” In March, management said that demand would be going up, but some experts weren’t sure. The store’s more positive outlook will be put to the test by the latest findings.
The numbers to watch
Adobe, Broadcom, Oracle sales: Cloud-software provider Oracle Corp., reports on Tuesday, while chipmaker Broadcom Inc. puts out results on Wednesday, followed by Adobe Inc. on Thursday. The results will arrive as Oracle ORCL, +1.96% and Broadcom AVGO, +0.38% try to keep up in the artificial intelligence arms race, and as analysts worry about increasing competition for Adobe ADBE, +1.59%.