Dividend Hikes Offer Optimism Amid Tariff Turmoil

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S&P 500 earnings per share estimates have come down sharply. According to FactSet, calendar year 2025 is now expected to show $266 in operating EPS for the Index.[1] Forecasts had called for nearly $280 as recently as last Q3 last year. Of course, macro headwinds have come about, to put it nicely. Many large US multinational corporations are tarrified, as Ed Yardeni puts it. Josh Brown of Ritholtz Wealth Management has dubbed it Tariff Spring. Still, global equities have proven to be resilient.

Following a sharp rally off the April 7th low, US large caps now collectively trade just above the 20x price-to-earnings multiple mark, while international stocks actually closed April at an all-time high on a total return basis.[2]

Strong Dividend Increase Trends

Investors should go beyond profit expectations and near-term price action, though. Our team dug into the data and found some interesting results. It turns out that since the beginning of April, 29% of global firms that have updated their dividend policies have raised their dividend, while just 7% have announced a cut.

While still early for a full second-quarter tally, that 23% positive differential is five percentage points above the 17.9% hikers-to-cutters gap from Q2 last year. It's also better than the 17.2% figure compared to two years ago.

Dividend Changes by Percent: Solid Start to Q2 (Net +23%)

Dividend Hikes Offer Optimism Amid Tariff Turmoil
Dividend Hikes Offer Optimism Amid Tariff Turmoil

Source: Wall Street Horizon

Always Pay Attention to Corporate Body Language

The bears might assert that we are torturing the data with this one, but it's clear that corporate profitability was very strong ahead of President Trump's so-called Liberation Day. Much uncertainty lies ahead, even after the sanguine stock response in the past four weeks, but perhaps executives are signaling to investors that we'll get through this era of unease okay.

The pessimists and optimists will keep duking it out, and we'll watch how first-quarter earnings come in over the weeks ahead. Usually, the latter half of the reporting period is somewhat uneventful since big-cap tech (sans NVIDIA (NVDA)) has already issued numbers to the street. This time, though, retailers will be particularly pivotal to monitor.

Retail Earnings On Tap

Consumer companies are in the crosshairs of the tariff turmoil. Immediately before the release of the April Retail Sales report, Walmart (WMT) reports next Thursday morning (May 15). A slew of retailers then post Q1 results the following week, including the likes of Home Depot (HD), Lowe's (LOW), Macy's (M), Target (TGT), and Ross Stores (ROST).