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Traders Fixated on What Companies Spend More Than Earn

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(Bloomberg) -- Wall Street is already looking past what’s expected to be Corporate America’s slowest gain in quarterly earnings in a year, instead focusing on a number that rarely captures the limelight: capital expenditures.

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As President Donald Trump’s on-again-off-again tariff regime keeps investors wondering what comes next, they’re turning their attention to the pace at which the companies that propel the economy are spending to build their businesses. The hope is that their stance on big expenditures, like real estate or major machinery, will offer clarity into how they see the economy.

“I don’t think businesses can spend cash in a time like this,” said Scott Ladner, chief investment officer at Horizon Investments. “It is not an environment in which they can operate as usual, so they become very conservative. It is a wait-and-see situation.”

The early signs confirm Ladner’s thinking. This week, JB Hunt Transport Services Inc., a transportation industry bellwether, cut its capital expenditure plan for the year, following a similar move last month by FedEx Corp. Meanwhile, United Airlines Holdings Inc. laid out two possible earnings scenarios — one if there’s a recession and another if it’s avoided — yet in both cases its long-term investments were below prior expectations.

“The first quarter is already old news, even more so this time because things have changed so dramatically this month and look to change even further in the months ahead,” said Paul Christopher, head of global investment strategy at Wells Fargo Investment Institute. “We are looking very carefully at the guidance that firms come out with, especially from industrials and materials.”

Pessimism Builds

Recent economic surveys add to the pessimism. Data from the Federal Reserve banks of Philadelphia, New York, Richmond and Dallas all show that manufacturers’ plans for capital spending fell in the first quarter. The March NFIB small business optimism survey — which typically has a pro-Republican bias — fell below its 51-year average. And a poll by Chief Executive magazine conducted earlier this month found that just 26% of the 329 corporate leaders who participated planned to increase their capital expenditures, down from 36% in March and 56% in January.