article via Sherwood News by Hyunsoo Rim – —>CLICK HERE<— for complete article
There’s one major tailwind for the Mag 7 ahead of earnings
| Tariffs are set to rise again, with country-specific duties kicking in next month… yet Wall Street remains firmly unbothered.Major stock indexes notched new highs last week, fueled in part by a strong start to the second-quarter earnings season, with 83% of S&P 500 companies beating expectations so far. And one tailwind helping corporate America’s bottom line is the falling US dollar. An unintended byproduct of the “T word,” a significant amount of demand for the US dollar has evaporated in the last few months, with the DXY — a weighted average of the USD against six global currencies — down 7% since the start of the year. Perhaps counterintuitively, a lower dollar translates into higher revenue for companies that do a lot of business overseas. In fact, per Goldman Sachs estimates published Friday, every 10% drop in the dollar translates into roughly 2% to 3% gains for S&P 500 earnings per share — and that’s already showing up. Last week, companies like 3M, PepsiCo, and Netflix have all attributed their strong Q2 results to favorable foreign exchange. |

| But the larger beneficiaries could be the tech giants of the Magnificent 7, which Goldman estimates generate 49% of their combined revenue overseas — far above the S&P 500 average of 28%. Alphabet and Tesla are the first two of the Mag 7 set to report Q2 earnings on Wednesday. Of course, it’s not all upside: any parts or services bought from abroad will be more expensive as well, offsetting some of the benefit. These global companies will also face “above-average risk” if trade tensions escalate further, and while a weaker dollar boosts profits on paper, it can also mask deeper concerns — namely, the reasons that the dollar fell in the first place, such as rising federal debt and uncertainty around US growth prospects. |
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