Investors are too pessimistic on earnings, stocks jump

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Investors are too pessimistic on earnings, stocks jump

Stock futures traded slightly higher Tuesday evening as investors eyed a batch of stronger than expected earnings results with increasing optimism over the trajectory of corporate profits even in the face of supply chain constraints.

Contracts on the S&P 500 edged up. The blue-chip index closed a fifth straight session in positive territory on Tuesday, marking its longest winning streak since August. Bitcoin BTC prices topped $64,000 per share and closed at an all-time high after the first exchange-traded Bitcoin futures fund or the ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF BITO rose by. United Air Lines UAL shares rose after the carrier posted a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss and revenue that topped expectations, albeit while remaining some 32% below 2019 levels.

These better-than-feared earnings results — in addition to those from earlier reporters including the big banks last week, and Procter Gamble and Johnson Johnson Tuesday morning — have helped assuage traders' concerns that corporate profits would slow dramatically after a second-quarter surge. Investors have been nervously monitoring inflation data showing prices jumping the most in decades, on top of a myriad of reports over persistent labor and materials shortages and delivery issues. All of these factors were expected to weigh heavily on corporate profits.

We think investors have been too pessimistic on earnings expectations, Jon Adams, BMO Capital Markets senior investment strategist, told Yahoo Finance Live. It does look like Q 2 was likely the peak, but Q 3 is going to be strong, probably above 30% year-over-year growth We think the strength will continue into the fourth quarter, we're not overly concerned about profit margins, Adams added. We are closely monitoring supply chain issues and increasing wage pressures, but still think that profit margins are at healthy levels and that there's more upside to come. Other pundits also suggested that price pressures may begin to ease over the coming quarters.

I do think that as these supply chain issues subside throughout the course of 2022, we're also going to start to see inflation moderate from these elevated levels, Meera Pandit, global market strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management, told Yahoo Finance Live. It won't be completely transitory. Things like housing, things like food we've seen wages come a little bit higher. So we're going to see higher inflation than we did during the last expansion. But it's going to come down and moderate from these levels.