Amazon, Apple Earnings to Provide Look at Consumer Habits
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2023-07-31 18:47
Consumer habits will come to the fore again in this week’s earnings deluge, as Amazon.com Inc., Shopify Inc.

Consumer habits will come to the fore again in this week’s earnings deluge, as Amazon.com Inc., Shopify Inc. and PayPal Holdings Inc. are expected to talk about online spending trends, and Apple Inc. may comment on the outlook for iPhone sales.

This week follows a packed one that showed the US economy and consumer spending growing at a faster clip than expected, while corporate earnings delivered a few surprises of their own. Intel Corp. surged after the chipmaker signaled its long-awaited comeback may be just around the corner; McDonald’s Corp. and Mastercard Inc. also topped estimates. Thus far, US companies have registered the most earnings beats in almost two years, according to data tracked by Bloomberg Intelligence, and companies selling non-essential products and services have delivered more surprises than others.

In the semiconductor sector, Qualcomm Inc., Western Digital Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. are expected to report sales declines amid prevailing uncertainty. Results from pharmaceutical giants Pfizer Ltd. and Merck & Co. will be scrutinized for advances in oncology and human papillomavirus vaccines as the Covid-19 windfall subsides and sales of older medicines slow.

Monday: Western Digital (WDC US) may have approached a trough in demand for flash and hard-disk drives in the fiscal fourth quarter, paving the way toward a slow recovery, Bloomberg Intelligence said. Still, a fifth consecutive quarter of sales declines is likely, with a projected year-over-year drop of 44%. Investors will be keen for an update on the merger with Kioxia Holdings, but expect those questions to be deflected, BI said.

Tuesday: Evaporating uptake of Pfizer’s (PFE US) Covid vaccine is the biggest reason for a projected 51% plunge in quarterly sales. As sales from newer therapies including the company’s respiratory syncytial virus vaccine are unlikely to kick in before the second half, chances of an upgrade to full-year guidance at this point are thin, according to BI’s John Murphy. Questions also remain on its proposed $43 billion acquisition of cancer-treatment company Seagen.

Wednesday: Qualcomm’s (QCOM US) sales are expected to fall for a third consecutive quarter as consensus calls for a decline of 22% year-over-year. Apple, Samsung and Xiaomi — Qualcomm’s three largest customers, accounting for about 50% of revenue — are also seeing sales weaken. On the plus side, the automotive segment may offer some relief with projected growth of 28%. Results are due after the bell.

Thursday: Apple (AAPL US) is projected to report a third consecutive decline in revenue, as iPhone, iPad and Mac sales fall year-over-year. The fiscal third quarter is a seasonally weak period with the Mac being the sole product category that may post better-than-expected results, BI said. Apple has also asked its suppliers to keep iPhone shipments flat year-over-year as it contends with waning demand for electronics, though it may still raise prices for its Pro models. The company will probably order more shipments after it launches the iPhone 15, BI said.

Friday: No major earnings scheduled.

--With assistance from Immanual John Milton.

Author: Gabriel Sanchez, Redd Brown and Ignacio Gonzalez

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