Not exact matches
Profits: After - tax corporate profits growth is expected to remain strong, rising 6.7 percent next year after expanding by 3.8 percent thi
Profits: After - tax
corporate profits growth is expected to remain strong, rising 6.7 percent next year after expanding by 3.8 percent thi
profits growth is expected to remain
strong, rising 6.7 percent next year after expanding by 3.8 percent this year.
The wage pop [last Friday's 2.9 %
growth in hourly wages] spooked the markets because investors, already skittish as valuations were a bit steep (though not as bad as people have been saying, given
strong current and expected
corporate earnings), envisioned this sequence: wage
growth gooses price
growth (i.e., inflation), which raises both market and Federal Reserve interest rates, which slows
growth and shaves
corporate profit margins.
Landslide election victory of Prime Minister Abe sets stage for
strong economic
growth and robust
corporate profits.
The resurgence in
corporate profits, a broad - based improvement in global economic
growth, the stabilization of commodity prices and
strong purchasing managers» indexes all support an upswing in capital spending.
PBO is forecasting much
stronger growth in personal income and therefore higher personal income tax revenues offset to some extent by slower
growth in
corporate profits and thereafter lower
corporate income tax revenues.
Corporate profit growth has accelerated, supported by
stronger nominal GDP
growth (domestic demand pick - up) and receding headwinds from the EM adjustment and commodity price shock of 2014 - 16.
Quarterly U.S. earnings have been
strong, but investors said worries are increasing that
corporate profits are at a peak, with estimated year - over-year
profit growth for S&P 500 companies above 25 percent, according to Thomson Reuters data.
In Asia, we expect
strong economic
growth in China and India to feed through to better
corporate profits across the region.
The
strong growth observed in the national accounting measure of
profits has also been reflected in financial measures of
corporate earnings such as «as reported» earnings and «operating» earnings (Graph A3).
Corporate profitability remains
strong, although the
growth in
profits, as measured by private non-financial gross operating surplus (GOS), has eased recently after a period of
strong growth (Graph 32).
Corporate profit growth hit a wall this year, as plunging prices of oil and metals slammed energy and raw - material producers, the
stronger dollar hurt exporters, and economic
growth remained tepid.
History has shown
strong correlations between economic
growth, as measured by GDP, and
corporate profit growth.
One is that a
stronger economy will reaccelerate
corporate profit growth.
In an environment where question marks loom about the sustainability of
corporate profit growth, there are
strong merits for allocating capital towards more defensive assets like listed real estate.
Continuing solid spending by consumers and businesses, steady government spending, a recovering stock market, and
strong corporate profits are behind the steady
growth.