Tags: jeremy siegel | stocks | earnings | quarter | trump | tax | fed

Jeremy Siegel Expects 'Very Good' Fourth Quarter for Stocks, Earnings

Jeremy Siegel, University of Pennsylvania finance professor (Matt Rourke/AP)

By    |   Friday, 06 October 2017 08:28 AM EDT

Jeremy Siegel, University of Pennsylvania finance professor, thinks the year’s last quarter will be robust and healthy for corporate earnings as the bull market charges deeper into record territory.

“I think it looks like a good quarter. Earnings look very good,” he recently told Bloomberg TV.

“Firms have been fulfilling their earnings promise this year, better than any of the last three years I have seen. I think tax reform is icing on the cake. If we do not get it, there will be disappointment,” he said.

Meanwhile, a more than eight-year bull market on Wall Street will simmer for the rest of 2017 before picking up again next year, said strategists in a Reuters poll who were optimistic about corporate profits but concerned about slow tax reform progress.

"The economy and earnings are pretty good, and they're the building blocks. That's what's given us the good year-to-date (gains) and could continue to cause those of us who think stocks are OK but not great to be too cautious," said Robert Doll, chief equity strategist at Nuveen Asset Management in Princeton, New Jersey. He has a 2,550 year-end target for the S&P 500.

Recent hurricanes in the United States curbed some consumer spending in August but accounted somewhat for a surge in a measure of U.S. manufacturing activity to a near 13-1/2-year high in September.

Other data showed new orders for U.S.-made capital goods increased more than expected in August.

How long the bull run lasts will depend also on the Federal Reserve, whose accommodative monetary policy has helped fuel the market's rally in recent years, and whether the U.S. economy can keep growing as the Fed hikes U.S. interest rates further.

Last month the Fed signaled it expects one more rate hike by the end of the year but said it was closely watching inflation. If inflation stays low, that could mean a less aggressive Fed, analysts said.

Investors also face the prospect of a new Fed chief early next year. Chair Janet Yellen, whose term expires in February, is among several under consideration for the job.

While investors have cheered Trump's proposed tax reform, the plan is only in its early stages, and already has prompted criticism, including that it could add trillions of dollars to the deficit.

"There are a lot of details that need to be worked out," said Scott Wren, senior global equity strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute in St. Louis, Missouri. Wells Fargo has a 2017 target of 2,350 for the S&P 500 and a 2018 target of 2,500.

Republicans so far have been unable to produce any major legislative successes since Trump took office in January, despite controlling the White House and both Houses of Congress.

Strategists expect companies' profit growth to help justify lofty valuations and sustain gains in stocks. Analysts forecast a year-over-year earnings gain of 11.5 percent for the S&P 500 in 2017 and growth of another 11.1 percent in 2018, Thomson Reuters data shows.

(Newsmax wires services contributed to this report).

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StreetTalk
Jeremy Siegel, University of Pennsylvania finance professor, thinks the year's last quarter will be robust and healthy for corporate earnings as the bull market charges deeper into record territory."I think it looks like a good quarter. Earnings look very good," he recently...
jeremy siegel, stocks, earnings, quarter, trump, tax, fed
503
2017-28-06
Friday, 06 October 2017 08:28 AM
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