How do prices behave before earnings announcement?

Fran8

Active member
Messages
212
Likes
1
Hi everyone,

I would like to know if prices have a certain way of behaving depending on the earnings announcement, for instance if on the previous days price raises means that earnings are going to be better than expected? Or what happens if prices are flat?.
Basically I would like to know if there is any way to know by some indication how is going to be the earnings release?

Thanks
 
Every time is different. If you are looking at studies over thousands of trades based on prior closing prices I don't know if everyone has done it. I read a very interesting study of Friday closing prices and Monday opens. However, that doesn't mean anything on an individual trade, just what to expect over time over a large sample
 
Price behviour pre-earnings is not a reliable indicator but I did some work on price behaviour post-release across the FTSE350 some years back - there was a small excess of price performance in the direction indicated by the price movement on the day of the release, up or down, compared to the previous session's close, over 3 days. So it would be possible for example to go long if the price on release day ended higher than the previous day's close, using the previous day's close as the stop. It works quite often, but over such a short period the reward did not really justify the risk. Over a longer period, the release date tended to be less significant. I have seen a Sandy Jadeja video in on the web which he explains the same strategy.
 
Hi everyone,

I would like to know if prices have a certain way of behaving depending on the earnings announcement, for instance if on the previous days price raises means that earnings are going to be better than expected? Or what happens if prices are flat?.
Basically I would like to know if there is any way to know by some indication how is going to be the earnings release?

Thanks

Hi Fran,
Not that i did an exhaustive study on the matter,or anything, but by looking at the charts for quite long time now, I very very often see that if price goes one direction with a bit of momentum hours or minutes before any news release, there is huge probability to just go the other way around when the figure is out ....
Also there are some certain pairs that almost always makes a quite sizable move on the exact moment of announcement itself, and always get faded the other way even harder.....
 
Basically I would like to know if there is any way to know by some indication how is going to be the earnings release?

Thanks

btw.... i think the releases numbers themselves are not that important if they are not deviated BIG time from the expected figure....
the important thing is how big traders interpret them, and/or how they use them as an excuse to shake the market....
 
Hi Fran,
Not that i did an exhaustive study on the matter,or anything, but by looking at the charts for quite long time now, I very very often see that if price goes one direction with a bit of momentum hours or minutes before any news release, there is huge probability to just go the other way around when the figure is out ....
Also there are some certain pairs that almost always makes a quite sizable move on the exact moment of announcement itself, and always get faded the other way even harder.....

That has been what I have been seeing a lot. I have see also stocks going up on the previous days and even if they beat estimates they go down because it was already spected. I found traiding earnings a bit complicated after all
 
That has been what I have been seeing a lot. I have see also stocks going up on the previous days and even if they beat estimates they go down because it was already spected. I found traiding earnings a bit complicated after all

that's the famous quote: "buy the rumor, sell the fact"..... or "sell the rumor, buy the fact"...lol
 
Top