Q3 Tech Sector Earnings: Slower Growth Scrutinized

Info tech stocks had their worst quarter relative to the broader market since late 2022, but that doesn't necessarily cast a cloud over sector earnings ahead. What might raise concern is slowing growth among many of the biggest tech stocks outside of semiconductors over the last year.

"Slowing earnings growth estimates for mega-cap tech could suggest that the law of large numbers may be coming into play and perhaps explains some of the recent relative underperformance from mega-cap tech," said Nathan Peterson, director of derivatives analysis at the Schwab Center for Financial Research.

For instance, analysts expect Microsoft's (MSFT) fiscal year earnings per share (EPS) to rise 10.8%, down from the five-year average growth of 18.7%, according to Yahoo Finance. Apple's (AAPL) fiscal year EPS is seen up 16.4%, down from the five-year average of 19.3%. At Cisco (CSCO), it's –4% versus the five-year average of 4.4%.

The slowing earnings growth now baked in may explain some of the recent lethargic stock performance in the tech sector.

"With the exception of Meta Platforms (META) and Apple, most mega-cap tech stocks have been kind of flat to down over the past couple of quarters in terms of performance, and it might have to do with growth deceleration compared with the potential for growth acceleration for small caps if the Federal Reserve keeps lowering rates," Peterson said.

Apple, Microsoft, IBM (IBM), and other major data center and device companies report third-quarter earnings starting later this month and in early November. This follows much better-than-expected second-quarter results where sector EPS rose more than 20% year over year compared with around 11% earnings growth for the overall S&P 500® index (SPX), according to research firm FactSet. Analysts had entered the second quarter expecting 16%.