Q3 2017 Earnings Season Wrap: Winners And Losers

 | Nov 22, 2017 02:57

by Clement Thibault

Another earnings season is behind us and what a season it was. The S&P 500 and Dow Jones were propelled to new highs and based on Q3 results, corporate earnings are on the rise. According to our data, there were twice as many earnings beats as misses.

While some companies did extraordinarily well, others seriously disappointed. As a rule, analysts aren't generally expecting a particular number, rather more of a range. So as long as results fall within that range, a stock carries on normally. However, when companies really surprise—either to the upside or the downside—or better yet, an executive prognosticates on future performance during a company's earnings call, that’s when sparks can really fly.

To close the Q3 earnings season, here's a look at the five biggest winners and losers. Our list moves through the top and bottom five in ascending order:

h2 Winners/h2 h3 5. Foot Locker/h3

Close before earnings - $31.8; after earnings - $40.8, +28.1%

Foot Locker (NYSE:FL), the sports shoe and apparel retailer, has been one of this year's worst performers, dropping from $77 a share in April to under $30 in November. The huge jump following earnings, was, unsurprisingly, a 'not-as-bad-as-expected' relief rally of sorts. Comparable sales fell by 3.7%, revenue is down 0.8% on the year, and even that relatively low number is because of favorable currency exchange on a weaking dollar. Without that FX assist, revenue would have been down 2.3%. When a stock falls so far so quickly, investors sometimes cling to any and every piece of good news, using it to drive the stock back up. This time, a $40 million beat on revenue ($1.87B vs 1.84B expected) did the trick, and the stock soared. 'Not-as-bad-as-expected' is generally seen as a good thing. Perhaps...for a day or two. But overall, Foot Locker remains in a very precarious situation. As investors, we'd stay away.

h3 4. Amazon/h3

Close before earnings - $972; after earnings - $1100, +13.1%

When shares of a company already worth hundreds of billions of dollars jumps an additional 13%, you know something big has happened. First, Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), the online retailing heavyweight, reported $43.7 billion dollars in revenue this quarter, which, even as a standalone number, is awe inspiring.

That number was good for 34% growth over the last year, 29% without the Whole Foods acquisition. Amazon Prime Day took place during the quarter too, and the holiday season is just ahead, so the retail operation is firing on all cylinders. AWS, Amazon's cloud service segment, brought in $1.2 billion in operating revenue, making up for the loss $900 million loss from Amazon's International segment.

Get The App
Join the millions of people who stay on top of global financial markets with Investing.com.
Download Now

As long as AWS keeps growing at a 40%+ rate, Amazon is solid.

h3 3. Intel/h3

Close before earnings - $43.1; after earnings - $44.4, +7.5%

A strong quarter from an underpriced company such as Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) is always a good recipe for a nice jump in the share price. Which is just what happened. Intel's price was kept low by concerns related to the competitive environment among chipmakers. To put it more succinctly, two things were of concern: NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD). Notwithstanding the competition, the semiconductor giant proved its ability to grow despite competitive headwinds, posting $16.1 billion in revenue and $1.01 in EPS, compared to the $15.7 billion and $0.8 EPS Wall Street expected. Data Center revenue was up 7%, Internet of Things revenue jumped 23%, and revenue related to its memory group segment rose 37%. All that was already good, and with a raise in guidance for Q4, Intel shares jumped more than 7% on the day of the report.

h3 2. First Solar/h3

Close before earnings - $47.9; after earnings - $57.6, +20.2%