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US investors sweat over profits for rest of 2003
AFP, WASHINGTON, July 8

Investors, pumping up stocks in anticipation of an economic bounce in the second half of 2003, are now nervously awaiting the hard evidence from corporate America, analysts say.
   Over the next few weeks, most US companies will report profits for the second quarter of 2003. Operating profits are widely expected to be up by between five and 10 percent from year-ago levels.
   But Wall Street is rising fast because investors are banking on much richer profits in the second half of 2003 fueled by a recovery in the wider economy, market analysts said.
   If the economic and corporate recovery is postponed again, after repeatedly being knocked back after the September 11 attacks, the stock market rally may unravel, they said.
   “I think there is a danger that we could slip into another correction here,” said Thomson First Call research director Charles Hill.
   “This rally has been built on expectations that we are going to get back to a more traditional recovery, and that may not be on the cards.”
   Analysts generally expect firms on the Standard and Poor’s 500 index to boost operating profits by 5.2 percent in the second quarter when compared to a year ago, according to a Thomson First Call survey.
   But profits for the three months will likely rise by an even steeper margin than the analysts’ consensus expectation, increasing by eight to 10 percent from year-ago levels, Hill forecast.
   For the rest of year, analysts’ expectations were even higher.
   The consensus forecast was for company profits to rise 12.7 percent from a year ago in the third quarter of 2003, and by 21.4 percent in the fourth quarter, Hill said.
   “But here we are now, a few days into the second half and we are not hearing anything from the companies in the aggregate about things getting materially better,” he said.
   “The economic numbers are certainly not showing much of a sign of improvement, particularly last week.
   “So, you really wonder.”
   The US unemployment rate shot up unexpectedly to a nine-year high of 6.4 percent in June, the government said last week.
   But other data showed a tentative recovery, including a more buoyant survey of the US services sector.
   Many analysts are tipping a sharp rebound in economic growth for the rest of 2003 fueled in part by 45-year-low interest rates and a 350-billion-dollar package of tax cuts.
   And corporate bosses, usually grim, appeared to be gaining hope.
   A business confidence barometer based on a survey of about 100 chief executives leapt to 60 points in the second quarter from 53 points in the first quarter, a private survey showed.
   “Latest survey results show steady improvement in chief executive confidence levels since the beginning of the year,” said Lynn Franco, director of consumer research for the Conference Board, which conducted the poll.
   “Growing optimism about profits suggests stronger corporate performance ahead,” she said.
   But the US economy was still suffering from too much capacity lying idle after the investment binge of the late 1990s, Hill said.
   Companies were waiting for consumers to mop up the excess before investing more money, he said.

 
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