Despite ample reasons for pessimism this year, the global economy and markets have largely exceeded expectations. This has sharpened attention on corporate financial results and guidance, as investors look for insight on how firms are navigating a more challenging operating environment caused by unpredictable U.S. trade policy, how tariffs are feeding into inflationary pressures in the U.S., and the potential impact on monetary policy. We discuss in more detail below.
A reassuring Q2 earnings season
With the U.S. earnings season now largely complete, results were generally better-than-expected, with the realized earnings growth rate handily surpassing consensus estimates. Notably, the number of earnings estimate upgrades relative to downgrades reached its highest level since late 2021, marking a reversal from earlier cuts prompted by uncertainty over the impact of supply chain disruptions, which to date have proven less severe than initially feared. While analysts have attributed the solid earnings performance to effective tariff-mitigation strategies and a weaker U.S. dollar, they also cautioned that the full effects of tariffs have yet to be felt given the front-loading of goods earlier in the year has likely deferred the impact.
Moreover, the burden of tariffs is unevenly distributed across industries. Some trade-reliant sectors are already feeling the pinch. For instance, major U.S. automakers revealed hefty import duty charges in relation to automobile and metals tariffs, while select retailers have delivered mixed results and warned of potential price hikes once their front-loaded inventories are exhausted. On a more positive note, persistently strong results and constructive guidance from large-cap technology and adjacent companies, key beneficiaries of the AI-related investment cycle, have provided crucial support to the S&P 500’s earnings momentum.
U.S. inflation readings flash mixed signals
Elsewhere, markets are closely watching the transmission of tariffs through the economy. The front-loading and inventory buildup at pre-tariff prices have temporarily shielded consumer prices and corporate profit margins. But as these stockpiles unwind, firms are likely to face an uncomfortable decision: absorb the tariffs at the expense of lower margins (which may increase pressure to cut costs elsewhere such as labour) or pass the tariffs onto consumers through price increases (which may dampen demand). Recent U.S. producer price data showed the strongest monthly increase in over a year, suggesting tariffs may be impacting prices further up the supply chain. However, the latest consumer price data was relatively benign. The divergence between consumer and wholesale prices underscores the difficulty in assessing the true trajectory of inflation, a factor that is complicating the outlook for U.S. monetary policy.
All eyes on Jackson Hole
What about Canada?
Meanwhile, consumer price pressures in Canada have eased, largely due to the unwinding of the consumer carbon tax back in April. On trade, the USMCA free trade agreement continues to backstop duty free access to the U.S. market for most Canadian exports. The U.S. Census Bureau reported 92% of Canadian exports to the U.S. crossed the border duty free in June―up slightly from 91% in May and 89% in April. The Bank of Canada (BoC) has held its benchmark rate steady at 2.75% for three consecutive meetings since March and RBC Economics expect the BoC is unlikely to cut again in this cycle.
Takeaway
In the U.S., an uptick in producer prices and the prospect of consumer price increases have renewed concerns that trade-policy uncertainty could stoke inflation in the near term. Nevertheless, strong corporate fundamentals alongside upward earnings revisions have continued to provide a foundation for cautious optimism in markets. For portfolios, “invested, but watchful” remains a sensible stance to us as we continue to monitor developments on trade policy and corporate earnings.