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European Corporates Head for Best Earnings Growth in 3 years

May 7 (Reuters) - Estimates for European blue-chip companies earnings are heading for their strongest growth since the first quarter of 2023, the latest LSEG I/B/E/S ​data showed on Thursday, thanks in part to soaring profits for ‌energy majors.

Earnings of European blue-chips are now expected to have grown 10.2% year-on-year in the first quarter, on average, based on results from 211 STOXX 600 companies ​and market estimates for those that are yet to report, the ​data showed.

Though earnings of energy companies - expected to grow by ⁠a breathtaking 48.4% - skew the average, non-energy companies are seen posting 5.7% ​higher earnings year-on-year.

  • However, the outlook for revenues has worsened from last week's 0.7% ​increase

  • STOXX 600 companies are now forecast to report a meagre 0.2% revenue growth

  • Weak revenue growth coupled with higher earnings may be a sign that companies' efforts to cut ​costs and restructure businesses could be paying off

  • According to the report, ​60.2% of companies beat earnings estimates

  • European energy majors have benefited from higher oil prices due ‌to ⁠the war in the Middle East

  • Though crude futures have fallen on hopes of a peace deal, they are still about 35% above pre-war levels

  • The real estate sector, on the other hand, is expected to post earnings 14.3% below ​those of last ​year

  • Europe's benchmark STOXX ⁠600 index quickly lost most of its 2026 gains after the U.S. and Israel struck Iran in February

  • It has ​since partially recovered, but it is still about 2% ​below pre-war ⁠levels

  • Despite the turnaround, the outlook for STOXX 600 companies is in contrast with that of U.S. listed S&P 500 firms

  • Earnings of S&P 500 companies are ⁠expected to ​rise 27.8%, mostly thanks to technology companies' ​51.9% growth, according to a separate LSEG I/B/E/S note from Friday

Reporting by Javi West Larrañaga in Gdansk; Editing by Matt Scuffham

Source: Reuters


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