Tag Archives: corpearnings

Chevron Rides High Oil Prices to Record $35.5 Billion Annual Profit

Chevron Corp.

CVX -4.44%

banked historic profit last year as the pandemic receded and the war in Ukraine pushed oil prices to multiyear highs, with its shares climbing 53% for the year while other sectors tumbled.

The U.S. oil company in its quarterly earnings reported Friday that it collected $35.5 billion in its highest-ever annual profit in 2022, more than double the prior year and about one-third higher than its previous record in 2011. Almost $50 billion in cash streamed in from its oil-leveraged operations, another record that is underpinning plans to pay investors through a new $75 billion share-repurchase program over the next several years.

That payout, announced Wednesday, is roughly equivalent to the stock-market value of companies such as the big-box retailer

Target Corp.

, the pharmaceutical firm

Moderna Inc.

and

Airbnb Inc.

Chevron, the second-largest U.S. oil company after

Exxon Mobil Corp.

, posted revenue of $246.3 billion, up from $162.5 billion the previous year. The San Ramon, Calif., company reported a fourth-quarter profit of $6.4 billion, up from $5.1 billion in the same period the prior year.

The fourth-quarter results came short of analyst expectations, and Chevron shares closed down more than 4% Friday.

For all of its recent winnings, though, Chevron and its rival oil-and-gas producers could face a rockier year in 2023, according to investors and analysts, if an anticipated slowdown in U.S. economic growth dents demand for oil, and if China’s reopening from strict Covid-19 restrictions unfolds slowly.

U.S. oil prices have held steady this year, but are off about 36% from last year’s peak. The industry is proceeding with caution, holding capital expenditures for 2023 below prepandemic levels and saying production will grow only modestly. Chevron has said it plans to spend about $17 billion in capital expenditures this year, up more than 25% from the prior year, but $3 billion less than it planned to spend in 2020 before Covid-19 took root.

Oil companies are still outperforming other sectors such as tech and finance, which have seen widespread job cuts in recent weeks. The energy segment of the S&P 500 index has climbed 43.7% over the past year, compared with a 6.7% drop for the broader index.

Chevron Chief Executive Mike Wirth said the company is unsure of what 2023 will bring after global energy supplies were squeezed because of geopolitical events last year, particularly in Europe following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. He said markets appeared to be stabilizing.

“We certainly have seen a very unusual and volatile year in 2022,” Mr. Wirth said, noting the European energy crisis has proven less dire than anticipated thanks to milder winter weather, growing natural gas inventories in Europe. “China’s economy has been slow throughout the year, which looks to be turning around. It’s good that markets have calmed.”

Chevron projects its output in the Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico to grow at a slower pace this year.



Photo:

David Goldman/Associated Press

Chevron hit a record in U.S. oil-and-gas production in 2022, increasing 4% to about 1.2 million barrels of oil equivalent a day, stemming from its increased focus on capital investments in the Western Hemisphere, particularly in the Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico, where it boosted output 16% last year. Worldwide, Chevron’s oil-and-gas production was down 3.2% compared with the prior year, at 2.99 million barrels of oil-equivalent a day.

Its overall return on capital employed came in at 20%, it said.

“There aren’t many sectors generating the type of free cash flow that energy is right now,” said

Jeff Wyll,

an analyst at investment firm Neuberger Berman, which has invested in Chevron. “The sector really can’t be ignored. Given the supply-demand balance, you have to have some things go wrong here to see a pullback in oil prices.”

Even so, institutional investors have shown limited interest so far in returning to the energy sector, after years of poor returns and heightened concerns about their environmental impact prompted large financiers to sell off their stakes in oil-and-gas companies or stop investing in drillers outright.

Pete Bowden,

global head of industrial, energy and infrastructure banking at

Jefferies Financial Group Inc.,

said energy companies in the S&P 500 index are throwing off 12% of the group’s free-cash flow, but only account for about 5% of the index’s weighting—an indication their stock prices are lagging behind.

Investors’ concerns around environmental, social and governance-related issues are a constraint on the share prices of energy companies, “yet the earnings power of these businesses is superior to the earnings power of companies in other sectors,” he said.

Chevron and others have faced criticism from the Biden administration and others that they are giving priority to shareholder returns over pumping oil and gas at a time when global supplies are tight and Americans are feeling pain at the pump. On Thursday, the White House assailed Chevron’s $75 billion buyout program, saying the payout was proof the company could boost production but was choosing to reward investors instead.

Pierre Breber,

Chevron’s finance chief, said the company expects oil prices to be volatile but within a range needed to sustain its dividend and investments. There are some optimistic signs, he added, including that the U.S. economy grew faster than expected in the fourth quarter, at 2.9%.

“Supply is tight. Oil-field services are near capacity, and we continue to have sanctions on Russian production,” Mr. Breber said. “You’re seeing international flights out of China are way up, and low unemployment in the U.S.”

Mr. Breber said Chevron’s output in the Permian this year is expected to grow at a slower pace, around 10%, because it has exhausted much of its inventory of wells that it had drilled but hadn’t brought into production.

Exxon, which has typically posted quarterly earnings on the same day as Chevron, will report Tuesday. Analysts expect it will also post record profit for 2022, according to FactSet.

Both companies expect to slow their output growth this year in the Permian, considered their growth engine. The two U.S. oil majors, which had been growing output faster in the U.S. than most independent shale producers, are beginning to step up their focus on shareholder returns and allow output growth to ease, said Neal Dingmann, an analyst at Truist Securities.

“This has all been driven by investor requirements,” Mr. Dingmann said.

Write to Collin Eaton at collin.eaton@wsj.com

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Dow to Cut 2,000 Jobs Globally

Dow is slashing jobs and shutting down assets as it looks to make cost savings.



Photo:

Sean Proctor/Bloomberg News

Dow Inc.

DOW 0.40%

said it is laying off about 2,000 employees globally as job cuts that have so far been concentrated in the technology sector spread to other parts of the economy.

The Midland, Mich.-based chemicals company said it is targeting $1 billion in cost cuts this year as slowing economic growth and a drop-off in demand weigh on sales.

Dow said it is also shutting down certain assets and broadly looking to align spending with the macroeconomic environment. The company said it expects to book a charge of $550 million to $725 million in the first quarter for costs tied to the cost-cutting moves.

Chief Executive

Jim Fitterling

said the company is optimizing its cost structure amid macroeconomic uncertainties and “challenging energy markets, particularly in Europe.”

Shares of Dow rose less than 1% to close at $58.12 on Thursday.

Dow’s layoffs come after manufacturing conglomerate

3M Co.

said earlier this week that it was cutting 2,500 jobs globally, or about 2.6% of the company, as it confronts weakening demand.

The companies join a wave of technology companies that are cutting thousands of jobs as they recalibrate after growing rapidly at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. On Wednesday,

International Business Machines Corp.

said it would cut 3,900 jobs, while software company

SAP SE

on Thursday said it would shed 3,000 positions.

Dow on Thursday also posted weaker-than-expected results for the fourth quarter. Revenue fell more than 17% to $11.86 billion, missing analysts’ estimates, with the company citing slowing economic growth around the world and destocking of inventory by customers.

The company’s fourth-quarter profit tumbled to 85 cents a share, down from $2.32 a share a year earlier. Adjusted earnings for the quarter missed estimates by a penny.

“While we see initial positive signs from moderating inflation in the U.S., improving outlook for energy in Europe, and reopening in China, we continue to be prudent and proactive,” Mr. Fitterling said.

Dow said it is targeting $500 million in structural improvements and another $500 million in operating cost reductions. The company said it would look to cut costs tied to purchasing raw materials, logistics and utilities.

Write to Will Feuer at Will.Feuer@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Appeared in the January 27, 2023, print edition as ‘Dow to Cut Headcount by 2,000.’

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Microsoft Earnings Fell Last Quarter Amid Economic Concerns

Microsoft Corp.

MSFT -0.22%

recorded its slowest sales growth in more than six years last quarter as demand for its software and cloud services cooled on concerns about the health of the global economy.

The Redmond, Wash., company’s revenue expanded 2% in the three months through Dec. 31 from a year earlier to $52.7 billion. Its net income fell 12% to $16.4 billion. That is the company’s lowest revenue growth since the quarter that ended in June 2016.

“Organizations are exercising caution given the macroeconomic uncertainty,” Microsoft Chief Executive

Satya Nadella

said on an earnings call Tuesday.

The software company is the first of the tech titans to announce earnings for the quarter. It and others have recently announced layoffs of thousands of people to reflect a sudden lowering of expectations about future demand. Last week Microsoft announced plans to eliminate 10,000 jobs in response to the global economic slowdown, the company’s largest layoffs in more than eight years.

Microsoft said it expects around $51 billion in revenue this quarter, a 3% increase from the same quarter last year. Its shares, which had initially risen on the results in after-hours trading, gave up their gains after the company announced its guidance. 

Microsoft’s Intelligent Cloud business, which includes its Azure cloud-computing business, grew 18% to $21.51 billion. Azure grew 31%, which was slightly above some analysts’ expectations.

Microsoft is one of the top companies in cloud-computing services that have boomed during the pandemic. In the middle of the health crisis, Microsoft reported several quarters in a row of 50% or more year-over-year sales growth for its cloud-computing platform, the world’s No. 2 behind

Amazon.com Inc.’s

cloud. While Azure and Microsoft’s other cloud services remain the main engine for the company’s growth, demand isn’t what it was even a year ago as customers try to manage their cloud computing costs.

The company has been betting the next wave of demand for cloud services could come from more companies and people using artificial intelligence. It has been deepening its relationship with the AI startup OpenAI, the company behind the image generator Dall-E 2 and the technology behind ChatGPT, which can answer questions and write essays and poems.

“The age of AI is upon us and Microsoft is powering it,” Mr. Nadella said Tuesday.

Microsoft had been sheltered from much of the recent downturn because it gets most of its sales from companies rather than advertising and consumer spending. However, it isn’t immune to the end of pandemic trends that turbocharged demand, hiring and investment as well as economic headwinds such as high interest rates.

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Demand for Windows operating-system software has fallen with sales of the personal computers that use it. Households, companies and governments that bought computers during the pandemic are scaling back.

That was reflected in Microsoft’s personal computing segment revenue, which fell 19% to $14.24 billion. Sales related to its Windows operating system declined 39% and sales of devices like its Surface tablets fell 39%.

Worldwide PC shipments were down 29% in the fourth quarter last year compared with the previous year, according to preliminary data from the research firm Gartner Inc. Financial analysts don’t expect that trend to improve until 2024.

Photos: Tech Layoffs Across the Industry

Microsoft said its videogaming revenue fell 12% during the quarter. Videogames and Microsoft’s Xbox videogame consoles are increasingly important businesses for the company. The videogaming industry is going through a slowdown as pandemic-related restrictions ease and people spend less time at home.

The company made a huge bet on the sector a year ago with its $75 billion plan to acquire videogame giant

Activision Blizzard Inc.

Last month the Federal Trade Commission sued to block the acquisition, saying the deal would give Microsoft the ability to control how consumers beyond users of its own Xbox consoles and subscription services access Activision’s games. Microsoft then filed a rebuttal saying the deal won’t hurt competition in the videogaming industry. It could take months before it is decided in the U.S. and elsewhere whether the deal can go through.

After the close of regular stock trading on Tuesday, Microsoft shares had slipped around 18% over the previous year, broadly in line with the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index.

Write to Tom Dotan at tom.dotan@wsj.com

Write to Tom Dotan at tom.dotan@wsj.com

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3M to Cut Jobs as Demand for Its Products Weakens

3M Co.

said it is cutting 2,500 manufacturing jobs globally as the company confronts turbulence in overseas markets and weakening consumer demand.

The maker of Scotch tape, Post-it Notes and thousands of other industrial and consumer products said Tuesday that it expects lower sales and profit in 2023 after demand weakened significantly in late 2022, pulling down quarterly performance.

The St. Paul, Minn., company forecast sales this year to slip from last year’s level with weak demand for consumer products and electronic items, particularly smartphones, tablets and televisions, for which 3M provides components. Fourth-quarter sales for 3M’s consumer business dropped nearly 6% from the same period a year earlier.

“Consumers sharply cut discretionary spending and retailers adjusted their inventory levels,” 3M Chief Executive

Mike Roman

said during a conference call. “We expect the demand trends we saw in December to extend through the first half of 2023.”

3M shares were down 5.2% at $116.25 Tuesday afternoon, while major U.S. stock indexes were little changed.

The company said demand for its disposable face masks is receding, as healthcare providers spend less on Covid-19 measures, and mask demand returns to prepandemic levels. 3M said it expects mask sales to decline between $450 million and $550 million this year from 2022.

3M executives said the spread of Covid infections in China is weighing on sales there, and sporadic plant closings are interrupting industrial production. China also is reducing production of consumer electronics because of weakening consumer demand, they said, and 3M’s exit from its business in Russia last year will also contribute to lower sales this year.

The 2,500 layoffs represent roughly 2.6% of the company’s workforce, which a regulatory filing said was about 95,000 at the end of 2021. Mr. Roman declined to specify where the job cuts will take place, or whether the company might make further reductions as it reviews its supply chains and prepares to spin off its healthcare unit.

“We’re looking at everything that we do as we manage through the challenges that we’re facing in the end markets and we focus on driving improvements,” he said.

The company said it would take a pretax restructuring charge in the first quarter of $75 million to $100 million.

Mr. Roman said the job cuts were unrelated to litigation facing the company. 3M is defending against allegations that the so-called forever chemicals it has produced for decades have contaminated soil and drinking water. It is also involved in litigation over foam earplugs its subsidiary Aearo Technologies LLC sold to the military. About 230,000 veterans have filed complaints in federal court alleging the earplugs failed to protect them from service-related hearing loss.

3M has said the earplugs were effective when military personnel were given sufficient training on how to use them. In litigation over firefighting foam that incorporated forms of forever chemicals, 3M is expected to argue that the products were produced to U.S. military specifications, granting the company legal protection as a government contractor.

In both cases, Mr. Roman said the company is focused on finding a way forward.

3M said the strong value of the U.S. dollar continues to erode sales from other countries when foreign currencies are converted to dollars.

The company forecast that sales for the quarter ending March 31 will be down 10% to 15% from the same period last year. For the full year, the company projects sales to fall between 6% and 2%, and expects adjusted earnings of $8.50 a share to $9 a share. The company earned $10.10 a share in 2022, excluding special charges, and analysts surveyed by FactSet were expecting the company to earn $10.22 in 2023.

For the fourth quarter, the company posted a profit of $541 million, or 98 cents a share, compared with $1.34 billion, or $2.31 a share, a year earlier.

Stripping out one-time items, including costs tied to exiting the company’s operations making forever chemicals, adjusted earnings came to $2.28 a share. Analysts were looking for adjusted earnings of $2.36 a share, according to FactSet.

Sales fell 6% to $8.08 billion for the quarter, slightly topping expectations of analysts surveyed by FactSet.

Mr. Roman said there were promising signs for some of 3M’s businesses, including in biopharma processing, home improvement and automotive electrification, the last of which he said grew 30% in 2022 to become a roughly $500 million business.

“There’s more to it than consumer electronics, but certainly the consumer-electronics dynamics are the story of the day,” he said.

Write to John Keilman at john.keilman@wsj.com and Bob Tita at robert.tita@wsj.com

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Target Shares Plunge on Earnings Miss and Weak Holiday Sales Forecast

Target Corp.

TGT -13.14%

said consumers pulled back on their spending in recent weeks, sapping sales and profits in the latest quarter and putting a cloud over its holiday season.

Quarterly profits came in below Target’s forecasts and the company’s sales growth lagged behind larger rival

Walmart Inc.

WMT 0.72%

in the period. Target executives lowered their financial goals for the holiday quarter and said they are prepared to offer deep discounts in the coming months to clear out unwanted inventory and attract shoppers.

Target shares dropped 13% in Wednesday trading on the earnings, which came in well below Wall Street’s estimates. It is the second time this year the retailer has misjudged consumer demand—in the spring executives said they were surprised by shifts away from furniture and appliances.

Government data released Wednesday showed that retail spending, including purchases at restaurants, car dealers and gas stations, rose 1.3% in October from September. The data aren’t adjusted for inflation and the government earlier reported that consumer prices rose 7.7% in October from a year earlier.

Target executives said that sales worsened sharply in October and November with guests’ shopping behaviors increasingly affected by inflation, rising interest rates and economic uncertainty.

“Clearly it’s an environment where consumers have been stressed,” said Target Chief Executive

Brian Cornell

on a call with reporters. “We know they are spending more dollars on food and beverage and household essentials, and as they are shopping for discretionary categories they are looking for promotions.”

Target executives said consumers are waiting to purchase items until they spot a deal, buying smaller pack sizes and giving priority to family needs. Sales of food, beverage, beauty products and seasonal items were strong, they said.

Retailers are facing an uncertain holiday season with high food and gas prices pinching some households. Target, like many of its peers, has been discounting to try to clear out a glut of goods this summer. Target’s inventory rose 14.4% in the October quarter from a year ago, while its revenue rose 3.4%. Quarterly net income tumbled by half.

“We are committed to being clean at the end of the holiday season,” regarding excess inventory, said Target Chief Financial Officer

Michael Fiddelke,

on a call with analysts Wednesday. If consumer trends of recent weeks persist, “it will come with more markdowns to make sure we accomplish exactly that goal.”

Rival TJX Cos. reported mixed quarterly results on Wednesday, with lower sales and higher profit margins. The off-price retailer said its U.S. comparable-store sales declined 2% in the quarter, as gains in its Marshalls and T.J. Maxx apparel chains were offset by a drop in its HomeGoods chain.

TJX said it was comfortable with its inventory levels heading into the holidays and said it now expected U.S. comparable-store sales to be flat or up 1% from a year ago.

Walmart gets over half of its U.S. revenue from groceries, while Target’s business is more skewed toward discretionary categories such as home goods, apparel, electronics and beauty products. As consumers absorb higher prices, many are pulling back spending where they can.

Consumer spending has held up relatively well so far despite inflation, but experts say we’re approaching an inflection point. WSJ’s Sharon Terlep explains the role “elasticity” plays in a company’s decision on whether to raise prices. Photo illustration: Adele Morgan

For the most recent quarter, Target said comparable sales, those from stores and digital channels operating at least 12 months, rose 2.7% in the quarter ended Oct. 29 compared with the same period last year.

On Tuesday Walmart said U.S. comparable sales rose 8.2% in the quarter. Walmart executives said the retailer is attracting more higher-income shoppers as many shift spending away from discretionary categories to food and look for value.

Target said it is gaining market share in its five main categories, even as consumers pull back spending in some cases. Existing shoppers are buying more and visiting more frequently, said Christina Hennington, Target’s chief growth officer. Traffic to stores increased 1.4% in the most recent quarter.

This year Target expects a hit to its gross margin of around $600 million due to shrink, the industry term for theft and other product loss, said Mr. Fiddelke. “We’ve seen that trend has grown over the course of the year,” he said.

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Target, which surprised investors by slashing its forecasts twice in the spring, on Wednesday reduced its sales and profits expectations for its fiscal year, which ends in January.

“We expect the challenging environment to linger on beyond the holiday,” said Mr. Fiddelke.

The company now expects a low-single-digit percentage decline in comparable sales and an operating margin around 3% for the fourth quarter. In August Target said sales would grow in the low- to mid-single-digit percentage range for the full year and operating margin would be around 6% for the second half of the year.

Target executives said they would look to cut at least $2 billion in costs over three years. Executives said the company isn’t planning major layoffs or hiring freezes as part of the new cost-cutting program, but streamlining processes inside the company.

Write to Sarah Nassauer at sarah.nassauer@wsj.com

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Amazon Stock Slides After it Gives Weak Outlook Amid Recession Fears

Amazon.com Inc.

AMZN -4.06%

projected sales in the current quarter would be far below expectations, sending its stock plunging and offering the latest stark sign of how shifting economic forces are battering tech giants that thrived during the pandemic.

The company on Thursday said sales in the recently completed third quarter rose 15% from a year earlier, while net income was $2.9 billion—its first quarterly profit in 2022, though still a 9% decline from the same period last year.

The e-commerce giant jolted investors with its projection for revenue of $140 billion to $148 billion in the current period—analysts had expected more than $155 billion, according to FactSet. Amazon, which said the estimate includes a sizable hit from foreign-exchange factors, also said it anticipated operating income of anywhere between zero and $4 billion, reflecting the uncertainty looming over what is traditionally its biggest quarter of the year because of holiday shopping.

The company’s shares fell more than 12% in after-hours trading following the results to trade near $97. At that level, Amazon’s valuation is below $1 trillion, which it first hit in 2018.

The disappointing outlook capped an extraordinary several days that also saw shares of other tech giants plummet after their results showed worsening conditions in a range of areas.

Shares of

Facebook

parent Meta Platforms Inc., already battered over the past year, dropped nearly 25% on Thursday after it reported its second quarterly revenue decline in a row a day earlier.

Microsoft Corp.’s

stock also fell after it delivered on Tuesday its worst net income decline in more than two years and the weakest revenue growth in over five years. Google-parent

Alphabet Inc.

similarly disappointed investors with slowing sales.

These tech companies flourished during the pandemic, as life and work suddenly shifted more to the internet, pushing up sales and spurring the already fast-growing companies to accelerate hiring and investment.

Now, one after another, engines that drove that growth are sputtering. Sales of personal computers and other gadgets are falling. Consumers, walloped by inflation, are broadly trimming their spending, while companies are tightening their outlays for everything from digital ads to IT services.

“There is obviously a lot happening in the macroeconomic environment, and we’ll balance our investments to be more streamlined without compromising our key long-term, strategic bets,” Amazon Chief Executive

Andy Jassy

said Thursday. 

In the third quarter, Amazon’s online store sales rose 7% to $53.48 billion after falling in recent quarters. The segment includes product sales primarily on its flagship site and digital media content. Its online sales got a boost from its annual Prime Day sale, which this year fell in the third quarter where last year it was in the second quarter.

While still the nation’s largest online store, Amazon’s e-commerce division has struggled to grow this year. The company in the second quarter reported a 4% year-over-year drop in its online stores segment. That marked the largest drop since the metric was first reported in 2016.

This year, Amazon’s e-commerce machine—which has grown at breakneck speed for decade—has been showing signs that it could be entering a phase of slower growth. After a multibillion-dollar infrastructure build-out and hiring spree, it now has to contend with high inflation and concerns about a recession weighing on consumer spending.

Chief Financial Officer

Brian Olsavsky

said the company has entered a period of caution.

“We are preparing for what could be a slower growth period like most companies. We are going to be very careful on our hiring,” Mr. Olsavsky said during a call with reporters Thursday. “We certainly are looking at our cost structure and looking for areas where we can save money.”

He said Amazon is “seeing signs all around that people’s budgets are tight, inflation is still high.”

Analysts say the new challenges Amazon faces in e-commerce could linger.

Amazon has the largest share of online commerce, about 38%, but its market share has plateaued in recent years, according to market research firm Insider Intelligence. Analysts say the company’s size has made it unlikely the e-commerce unit’s growth would hit the same pace it once did. Amazon also is dealing with increased competition from

Walmart Inc.,

Target Corp.

and others.

Mr. Jassy has shifted toward cost-cutting. The company cut back on subleasing millions of square feet of excess warehouse space and put off opening new facilities while earlier thinning out its hourly workforce through attrition.

It enacted a hiring freeze through the end of the year at its corporate retail division, the segment that drives core sales and is responsible for a large part of this year’s slowdown. The company has paused hiring among some teams at its Amazon Web Services cloud-computing division.

While Amazon’s earnings continue to be aided by AWS and its expanding advertising business, growth slowed in the cloud business. AWS had sales of $20.5 billion during the third quarter, a 27% rise but one of the lowest rates of growth posted by the unit in recent quarters. Mr. Olsavsky said the company saw AWS customers “working to cut their bills.”

Amazon’s advertising revenues rose 25% to $9.5 billion.

Amazon is headed toward the end of the year with added challenges. After needing fewer blue-collar employees earlier in the year, it has looked to add more than 100,000 workers at its warehouses to meet the expected holiday demand. Still, that strategy has come with a cost. Amazon recently said it would spend $1 billion to raise average starting salaries to $19 an hour nationwide and is earmarking millions to raise wages and benefits for its delivery employees.

Consumers will be more likely to return to bricks-and-mortar stores for their holiday shopping this year, and economic concerns will likely weigh on spending, according to analysts. Amazon’s own

Jeff Bezos

seemed cautious about the future. He recently said it is time to “batten down the hatches,” referring to warning signs that the U.S. is headed for a recession.

Write to Sebastian Herrera at sebastian.herrera@wsj.com

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Apple, Amazon, McDonald’s Headline Busy Earnings Week

Amazon.

com Inc.,

Apple Inc.

and

Meta Platforms Inc.

are among the tech heavyweights featured in a packed week of earnings that investors will probe for indicators about the broader economy.

Other tech companies scheduled to report their latest quarterly reports include Google parent company

Alphabet Inc.

and

Microsoft Corp.

Investors also will hear from airlines such as

Southwest Airlines Co.

and

JetBlue Airways Corp.

, automotive companies

General Motors Co.

and

Ford Motor Co.

, and energy giants

Chevron Corp.

and

Exxon

Mobil Corp.

Nearly a third of the S&P 500, or 161 companies, are slated to report earnings in the coming week, according to FactSet. Twelve bellwethers from the Dow Jones Industrial Average, including

Boeing Co.

and

McDonald’s

Corp., are expected to report as well.

The flurry of results from a broad set of companies will give a sense of how businesses are faring as they deal with inflation denting consumer spending, ongoing supply-chain challenges and a stronger dollar.

People awaited the release of Apple’s latest iPhones in New York last month. The company will report quarterly results on Thursday afternoon.



Photo:

ANDREW KELLY/REUTERS

One area holding up to the challenges has been travel. Several airline companies have reported that consumers still have an appetite to spend on trips and vacations. On Friday,

American Express Co.

raised its outlook for the year in part because of a surge in travel spending.

“We expected the recovery in travel spending to be a tailwind for us, but the strength of the rebound has exceeded our expectations throughout the year,” American Express Chief Executive

Stephen Squeri

said.

In addition to airlines reporting, companies such as car-rental company

Hertz Global Holdings Inc.

and lodging companies

Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc.

and

Wyndham Hotels & Resorts Inc.

will offer reads into leisure spending.

Overall, earnings for the S&P 500 companies are on track to rise 1.5% this period compared with a year ago, while revenue is projected to grow 8.5%, FactSet said.

Other companies will serve as a gauge for how consumers have responded to higher prices and whether they have altered their spending as a result.

Coca-Cola Co.

and

Kimberly-Clark Corp.

on Tuesday and

Kraft Heinz Co.

on Wednesday will show how consumers are digesting higher prices.

Mattel Inc.,

set to report on Tuesday, will highlight whether demand for toys remains resilient. Rival

Hasbro Inc.

issued a warning ahead of the holiday season.

United Parcel Service Inc.

will release its results on Tuesday and provide an opportunity to show how it is faring ahead of the busy shipping season. The Atlanta-based carrier’s earnings come weeks after rival

FedEx Corp.

warned of a looming global recession and outlined plans to raise shipping rates across most of its services in January to contend with a global slowdown in business.

Results from credit-card companies

Visa Inc.

and

Mastercard Inc.

will offer insights into whether inflation has finally put a dent in consumer spending after both companies reported resilient numbers last quarter.

Wireless carrier

T-Mobile US Inc.’s

numbers on Thursday will give more context to mixed results from competitors

Verizon Communications Inc.

and

AT&T Inc.

AT&T

issued an upbeat outlook on Thursday after its core wireless business exceeded the company’s expectations, whereas Verizon on Friday said earnings tumbled as retail customers balked at recent price increases.

Other notable companies lined up to report include

Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc.

on Tuesday, chicken giant

Pilgrim’s Pride Corp.

on Wednesday and chip maker

Intel Corp.

on Thursday.

Write to Denny Jacob at denny.jacob@wsj.com

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