The first week of 2019 saw three of America's largest companies announce revenue expectation reductions, signaling a potential
cooling of the U.S. shipping market.
Leading the corporations is Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL), which announced its revenue for the end of 2018 would be lower than
expected due to poor sales in China.
This is the first time in 16 years that Apple has lowered its revenue expectations. The news prompted a selloff of Apple and other
China-exposed stocks, including General Motors (NYSE: GM).
Delta Air Lines, Inc. (NYSE: DAL) announced its unit revenue (revenue per each seat mile flown) would not
meet its 3.5 percent growth target for the fourth quarter of 2018. Delta shares fell roughly nine percent on Thursday, joining
Southwest Airlines Co. (NYSE: LUV) and American Airlines Inc. (NASDAQ: AAL), whose share prices declined during December 2018.
One reason for the airlines' poor stock market performance is oil prices. Air carriers
adjusted their fares and fees while cutting unprofitable flights in response to increasing crude prices in the first half of 2018
when they topped out at $86 per barrel. However, crude prices have since declined to roughly $56 per barrel, which historically
prompts airlines to forgo extra profits to compete by lowering fares. This reduces investor interest in the market sector.
FedEx Corporation (NYSE: FDX) also reduced its 2019 earning guidance from around $17 per share to roughly
$15-$16 per share. Shares of FedEx declined by 3.7 percent on Thursday and were down in 2018. FedEx CEO Frederick Smith blamed the
cut in earnings expectations on domestic tax issues, labeling discrepancies with Brexit, the immigration crisis in Germany, the
state-centered nature of the Chinese economy, and unilateral tariffs imposed by the United States.
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"Most of the issues that we are dealing with today are induced by bad political choices," Smith said during FedEx's fourth
quarter earnings call. "So you just go down the list and they are all things that have created a macroeconomic slowdown."
CNBC
analyst Jim Cramer concurred that entering China for American companies carries risk. He also agreed that the European market was
slowing due to the trade implications of Brexit.
The Institute for Supply Management found
discouraging figures in American manufacturing. Between November and December, the factory activity index dropped by 5.2 percent
from 59.3 to 54.1, the largest monthly decrease since the 2008 financial crisis. New factory orders dropped to 51.1 from 62.1, an
11 percent decline. When the index is above 50 percent, it indicates that the market for manufacturing is still growing, but the
steep drop is troubling.
FreightWaves SONAR examines orders for durable goods excluding transportation.
The market's lowest point since 2014 has been $141,619 million. By August 2018 that figure had grown by over 16 percent, reaching
$164,643 million. The second half of 2018 saw orders plateau, indicating a slowdown of manufactured goods.
Manufacturing accounts for 12 percent of the U.S. economy and roughly eight percent of the American workforce. The factory
employment index also fell by 2.2 percent from 58.4 to 56.2.
Consumer spending is also showing signs of weakness as the Consumer Confidence Index decreased from 136.4 in November to 128.1
in December.
One positive economic sign going into 2019 is the recent jobs report. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today that the
U.S. added 312,000 new jobs in December.
Additionally, average hourly earnings rose 84 cents, or 3.2 percent, for 2018. Meanwhile, unemployment rose to 3.9 percent,
signifying more Americans are entering the job market.
These gains are speculated to buoy consumer spending and delay the predicted economic slowdown.
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