Lately, it seems like the only thing that can stop the U.S. equity markets is a holiday early close. Heading into the 4th of July celebration, major stock indices are enjoying a festive 2023 thanks to 1) waning expectations of a long anticipated recession and 2) retreating inflation.
In contrast to earlier in the year, good economic news is actually good news for stocks these days. A very mild uptick in the latest personal consumption expenditure (PCE) reading is being cheered by investors because it suggests that the Fed will soften its hawkish interest rate stance. It could also mean that consumers will be spending more and corporate America will be banking higher profits in the months ahead.
As a result, domestic equities are flipping the script from a year ago. Take the Russell 1000 Index, a widely tracked benchmark that covers approximately 93% of the U.S. market. After dropping 19% in 2022, it's up 17% year-to-date.
Taking this second tier of Russell 1000 winners, Wall Street is still bullish on most — but starting to pump the brakes on others. The caution flag is being waved on these two first-half outperformers.
Has American Airlines Stock Flown Too Far?
To American's credit, it was the only Big Four airline to turn a small profit in the first quarter, its first of the post-pandemic era. Some 48.2 million passengers generated record revenue of $12.1 billion and a $10 million profit. However, the company's bloated debt balance is keeping analysts from coming on board.
This is a good example of why thorough fundamental analysis looks beyond the bottom line to leverage and other key parts of financial health. With a consensus Neutral rating and $18.00 price target, American could be in a second half holding pattern.
Are DaVita Shares Fully Valued?
Dialysis services provider DaVita Inc. (NYSE:DVA) rose 35% in the first half on the heels of back-to-back earnings beats. The company has benefited from increasing U.S. dialysis treatments and international growth as health care settings continue to normalize post-Covid. The problem is, profitability is trending in the wrong direction.
The profit issue may only worsen. Analysts are forecasting a 26% drop in earnings when the company reports second quarter results next month. The full-year consensus EPS estimate equates to a 15x P/E ratio. Since this is in-line with the five-year historical average P/E, Wall Street thinks the stock is appropriately valued. Unlike many first half winners, there's not a single Buy rating to be found on DaVita.
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