Chart Of The Day: FedEx Flashes Rare Bearish Signal Ahead Of Earnings Report

 | Sep 20, 2021 09:34AM ET

After a stellar period during which freight and logistics giant FedEx (NYSE:FDX) saw a surge in demand for its services during the pandemic, the Memphis, Tennesse-based parcel shipper is now struggling to grow profits amid evolving social restrictions and a changing market. As remote work continues trending, the company has been trying to restructure its business, an effort that was initiated even before the COVID outbreak started.

Even as the company continues to adapt to the constraints of this new economy, investors will be watching FedEx's Q1 fiscal 2022 earnings report, released tomorrow after the market close, to see if any of the company's changes have had an effect during the previous quarter.

The consensus forecast for FedEx is for the company to show an EPS of $4.94 on revenue of $21.9 billion. That would be somewhat higher than last year’s corresponding quarter, during which earnings came in at $4.87 EPS and a $19.3 billion revenue.

Last year's results handily beat expectations of $2.7 EPS, $19.3 billion revenue. But at that stage of the pandemic, FedEx was able to surprise since there was a low bar set during the height of the pandemic. For comparison, earnings estimates for the corresponding quarter in 2019 were $3.15 EPS on $17.06 billion, though the company fell short of that at the time.

Will FedEx surprise again even if expectations remain lower?

UBS analyst Thomas Wadewitz doesn’t think so. He reduced his price target on the stock, which closed on Friday at $255.22, to $380 from $397. That still leaves an implied 47.2% upside in the following 12 months. However, Wadewitz sees the recent spike in prices and disruption to the global supply chain as hurting the previous quarter’s results.

From a technical perspective, FedEx triggered a bearish signal in the most inopportune time for bulls, right ahead of the company's earnings report.

The recent selloff in its shares dragged down the 50 DMA below the 200 DMA, creating a Death Cross. That means the average performance over the last 50 trading days weakened, providing worse returns than the average of the previous 200 sessions.