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Review of the week: Profits are back

15 February 2021

Company profits are bouncing back earlier than expected. How quickly will our economies come back to life once vaccinations are finished? And how different will they be?

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Article last updated 22 July 2025.

It was all about results last week. Especially in America, companies have rebounded much quicker than most expected.

About three-quarters of the S&P 500 have reported their fourth-quarter results. About 80% of those businesses have beaten their sales estimates and a similar number have outstripped profit targets. Most reported profits roughly around 20% higher than forecast. For many, this wasn’t a high bar. The average company’s profits were 2.9% higher than a year earlier; the typical growth rate over the past five years was 3.8%. Still, this is the first earnings increase in a year – it’s good news.

Now the question is, how much will that accelerate over the coming year? The US vaccination programme is humming along; 38.3 million people have had at least one jab, including 14.1 million who are now fully vaccinated. That’s 12% and 4% of the population respectively. America is providing an average of 1.7 million doses each day and that number is steadily rising from one week to the next. It really needs to continue speeding up: at the current rate, it would take just under a year to fully inoculate everyone in the nation. While jabbing absolutely everyone is probably overkill, this calculation highlights how much work is involved in these programmes. And virtually every nation in the world is trying to do this at the same time. Expect periodic vaccine shortages, logistical problems and other curveballs along the way.

Europe has already stumbled, meaning swathes of its citizens will be unvaccinated for much longer than in other countries, pushing back the likely recovery of its economy till 2022 or maybe even 2023. I’m not trying to be a downer. This is all great progress and an amazing example of what we can achieve when we put our minds to something and work together to get it done! But it’s always prudent to remember, as Robert Burns wrote, “the best-laid schemes of mice and men…”. Keep an allowance for the unexpected.

 Index

1 week

3 months

6 months

1 year

FTSE All-Share

1.2%

8.8%

5.5%

-7.7%

FTSE 100

1.6%

6.3%

4.3%

-9.7%

FTSE 250

-0.1%

17.5%

9.4%

-1.6%

FTSE SmallCap

0.6%

28.2%

16.2%

11.3%

S&P 500

0.4%

10.4%

5.8%

10.5%

Euro Stoxx

0.7%

9.1%

6.1%

5.3%

Topix

1.8%

16.6%

6.5%

12.7%

Shanghai SE*

4.3%

12.0%

6.9%

26.8%

FTSE Emerging

1.8%

23.0%

13.8%

21.0%

Source: FE Analytics, data sterling total return to 12 February; *data to 10 February because of CNY

These figures refer to past performance, which isn’t a reliable indicator of future returns. Investments can go up or down and you may not get back your original investment.

Justifying want

The question on everybody’s mind is, what will people do when lockdowns are eased? Virtually everyone will want to rush out and throw their money around like confetti, enjoying all the things that we’ve missed out on during a year of house arrest.  Yet it takes more than desire to make a transaction.

First off, many people have had a really tough time during the pandemic. Hundreds of thousands of people have lost their job in the UK alone. Globally, the job losses run into the tens of millions. A whole host of people will be worried about how secure their livelihood is. These people may want to jet off to Brazil on a sun-drenched holiday, but they may not have the cash to do so. And even if they do, they may not be able to justify the expense to themselves. These decisions will be writ small as well, with similar calculations made on more mundane activities: will people be going out every day to restaurants, pubs, theatres, cafes and all those other daily extravagances? Even among the more fortunate, whose employment has been unaffected and their industry perhaps boosted by the pandemic, has a year of making the most of home comforts meant that, longer term – after the initial excitement of release – they may have picked up habits that make them less inclined to spend so much time out and about. People may have learned how to better enjoy their neighbourhood. Maybe they’ve found that, after all, some of the best things in life are free?

Secondly, a whole lot of businesses will have folded during arguably the most difficult year ever for the entertainment, travel and services sectors. Airlines have needed bailing out, pubs have shuttered, theatres have stood empty. When economies open up, it seems reasonable to expect that demand will dramatically outstrip supply. You can see the shadow of this looming over the Great British Staycation of 2021: UK holiday hotspots are already selling out even as the government warns people not to book and get their hopes up … It seems likely that the demand for all these social activities will drive up their cost as the service industry survivors are inundated with bookings. And that’s understandable – many of these businesses will have debts and deferred taxes to pay.

But higher prices could in turn put some people off, especially after a year where many have been surprised by how much they can save by making their own sandwiches and coffee. Perhaps people will content themselves with sharing a bottle of wine with friends in a local park, rather than paying a hefty bill for the same thing in a packed bar with no seats. People may find they enjoy one more than the other. If that means more people taking the cheaper option, that will have a significant impact on what economists call the ‘aggregate demand’ of our nation, the total amount of economic activity we generate. And when that demand changes, it has implications for unemployment.

This is the really interesting dynamic here. How much has the pandemic changed people’s behaviour? And how will we react to changes in the market for the things we used to take for granted? Only time will tell.

View PDF version of Review of the week

Bonds
UK 10-Year yield @ 0.52%
US 10-Year yield @ 1.21%
Germany 10-Year yield @ -0.43%
Italy 10-Year yield @ 0.49%
Spain 10-Year yield @ 0.16%

Economic data and companies reporting for week commencing 15 February

Monday 15 February

EU: GDP (Prelim), Balance of Trade

Interims: City of London Investment Group, Grit Real Estate Income Group

Tuesday 16 February

EU: ZEW Survey of Economic Sentiment

Full-year results: Glencore, Kerry, Nornickel
Interims: BHP Group, Blancco Technology Group, Pan African Resources, Petra Diamonds

Wednesday 17 February

UK: Producer Price Index, Consumer Price Index, Retail Price Index
US: MBA Mortgage Applications, Producer Price Index, Retail Sales, Capacity Utilisation, Industrial Production, Business Inventories, FOMC Minutes

Full-year results: British American Tobacco, Plus500, Rio Tinto
Interims: Transense Technologies

Thursday 18 February

US: Initial Jobless Claims, Import and Export Price Indices, Philadelphia Fed Index, Housing Starts, Building Permits, Continuing Claims, Crude Oil Inventories

Full-year results: Barclays, Indivior, Primary Health, Smith & Nephew
Interims: Hays, Wilmington

Friday 19 February

UK: GFK Consumer Confidence, Retail Sales
US: Existing Home Sales, Building Permits, Existing Home Sales
EU: Current Account, Consumer Price Index

Full-year results: NatWest Group, Segro, TBC Bank Group

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