Posts

Earnings Update: Aug. 15 Edition

Image
We are now deep into Q2 earnings season, and Calcbench has data from nearly 3,500 non-financial companies collected and collated in our world famous Calcbench Earnings Tracker. Here’s the latest.  Broadly speaking, just about every line item you’d want to see going up is going up, although not all of them are going up by as much as we’d like. Still, upward is  better than downward.  Figure 1, below, tells the tale.  Revenue is up 4.3 percent from the year-ago period, a smidge more than than the increase we reported in last week’s earnings update . Net income is up 13.6 percent, a smidge less than the increase we reported last week. Cost of revenue, SG&A expenses, other operating expenses, inventory — they’re all moving by only a few tenths of a percent in either direction, as the big picture on earnings performance comes into clearer focus.  We still have a few more weeks of earnings season to go, but at this point one can safely say this is what Q2 2025 per...

When the Yeti Met Tariff Disclosures

Image
Several weeks ago Calcbench had a post reviewing the various ways that companies have begun to disclose the effects of tariffs on their financial operations.  Today we want to explore one particular company’s approach to tariff disclosures: Yeti Holdings ($YETI), maker of coolers, ice chests, stainless steel drink mugs, and related outdoor gear.  Why Yeti? Because the company talked at length about tariffs in its Q2 earnings release filed on Aug. 7 , mentioning the word 13 times. Moreover, Yeti disclosed a wide range of effects that tariffs might have on its operations, including some fascinating non-GAAP disclosures you’d typically never expect to encounter in the wild.  Let’s begin with the headline numbers from the income statement, which were underwhelming: revenue, gross profit, and operating income all down from the year-ago period; net income and EPS up only thanks to foreign currency adjustments. See Figure 1, below. OK, kinda yucky at that headline level — but ...

Earnings Update: Firms Still Holding On

Image
Another week, another batch of somewhat favorable earnings data from Corporate America. The famed Calcbench Earnings Tracker now has Q2 data from more than 2,300 non-financial firms — and in the aggregate, you can’t find too much that warrants gloom, panic, or hyperventilating. Figure 1, below, shows the big picture.  Revenue, operating income, and net income are all up from the year-ago period, which is good. At the same time, important line items to understand operation costs — cost of revenue, SG&A Expense, and operating expense — are all up too, although not quite as much as revenue and income numbers.  So despite all the pressures of tariffs, inflation, a sluggish job market, and other economic uncertainty, Corporate America is keeping its nose above water. That’s enough to declare victory at the end of a workweek. That said, remember our earnings update from last Friday, where we noted that a relatively small number of large firms accounted for essentially all the r...

The Bigger Picture of Blockbuster Drug Sales

Image
As regular readers of this blog know, from time to time Calcbench examines the revenues that pharmaceutical companies receive from their so-called “blockbuster” drugs — that is, the companies’ biggest-selling products, which typically are reported as individual operating segments. Today we wanted to examine a bigger issue: the total portfolio of blockbuster drugs that pharmaceutical companies manage, and how those individual revenue streams evolve over time. That is, a pharma company might depend for years on one blockbuster drug, but as that product approaches the end of patent protection or faces new competition from a rival, the pharma company will need to bring new blockbusters to market to succeed the old one.  To explore that question, we looked at individual drug sales at four large pharma companies — AbbVie, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, and Pfizer — from Q1 2020 to Q2 2025. The results are presented in four figures, below. First is AbbVie ($ABBV).  Next up is Johnso...

Earnings Update: Tale of Two Tales

Image
Today we have another update on corporate earnings from Q2 2025, and even at this early juncture — roughly 950 non-financial firms already reporting data, from an expected total of 3,400-ish by the end of earnings season in a few weeks — a clear story is starting to emerge. The largest of the large firms are doing great. Everyone else, only so-so.  Let’s start with total numbers overall. They are somewhat better than our first Q2 earnings update published last week thanks to a wave of rosy earnings releases this week, mostly from big tech companies. Revenue, operating income, and net income are all up by low- to mid-single digits — but operating and SG&A expenses are up too, both of them growing faster than revenue. Then again, cost of goods sold is growing more slowly than revenue, which is good; but only by a whisker, which is kinda sorta not good. Figure 1, below, shows everything in table format. The true story, however, is that only a handful of large, rapidly growing fir...

Charticle: Q2 Airline Earnings

Image
Five of the six major U.S. airlines have now filed their Q2 earnings reports, so it’s time for another quick stop in the land of earnings analysis. As we’ve said before, we love airline earnings data because the airlines report several fascinating non-GAAP financial performance metrics, such as total revenue per available seat mile (TRASM), load factor (the percentage of seats sold), and average fuel price per gallon. Calcbench tracks all that stuff! Subscribers can even use our airline industry template to track the latest earnings data as the airlines file it! For example, Figure 1, below, tracks TRASM for the six major U.S. carriers for the last five years.  As you can see, the airlines suffered a disastrous decline in TRASM during the 2020 pandemic year, then made a remarkable climb back to normalcy in the first half of 2022. All six have flown onward at roughly the same levels since then, each one fluctuating in a relatively narrow band.  Now compare TRASM to the more tra...

Q2 Earnings - Our First Look

Image
Welcome to second-quarter earnings season, everyone! We now have several hundred corporate earnings releases neatly indexed in the Calcbench databases, so it’s time to bring back our famed Calcbench Earnings Tracker! Each week from now until the end of August, Calcbench will crunch the earnings numbers of non-financial companies and compare that performance to the numbers from one year ago. As of this morning, July 25, we already have data for roughly 350 non-financial firms. As one might expect at this early juncture, the picture is mixed. Revenue is up a few percentage points, and operating income and net income are both up by a few points more; that’s good.  On the other hand, capex, opex, and SG&A expense (sales, general, and administrative) are all up a few points more than revenue too. That could suggest inflationary pressures are starting to hit corporations, but cost of goods sold — which would typically be the clearest indicator of inflation pressures — didn’t rise f...