Key facts
- Wall Street's Q1 earnings season exceeded expectations, pushing stocks to record highs.
- BCA Research warns of an 'earnings bubble' driven by AI demand.
- The bubble is characterized by unsustainable profit growth, not high valuations.
- Aggregate free cash flow among hyperscalers is crashing despite soaring reported profits.
- AI demand indicators do not suggest an imminent bubble burst.
Wall Street's first-quarter earnings season delivered strong results, pushing stocks to fresh record highs. However, BCA Research warns that this success is inflating a new type of market bubble, primarily driven by earnings rather than valuations. The firm's chief strategist, Peter Berezin, noted that while P/E ratios may appear reasonable, the current market is experiencing unsustainable profit growth, drawing parallels to historical earnings-driven bubbles like those preceding the Great Financial Crisis and the work-from-home beneficiaries in 2020-2021.
BCA highlights that the AI trade, revived by stellar earnings, is a key contributor. Supply-demand imbalances, particularly in memory stocks due to AI development, are leading to higher prices and profit margins. This is occurring even as aggregate free cash flow among hyperscalers is reportedly crashing. The firm cautions that earnings bubbles can be more detrimental than valuation bubbles if they result in excess capacity. While BCA's AI demand indicators do not suggest an imminent pop, they warn that if AI adoption falls short of expectations, the massive spending could negatively impact the broader economy.
