What Is An Earnings Run?

FinanceTrading / Investing

  • Author Larry Potter
  • Published October 7, 2006
  • Word count 410

We often get a chance to put dollars in our accounts by looking for

"earnings runs". What are they and why do they work? Well, the bottom line

is that the market still runs on fear and greed. Earnings season brings

out both.

The concept is really pretty simple. When earnings reporting season

approaches, we get a lot of traders who get excited about what they

"might" hear, so they start buying into the hope. If a stock hasn't come

out to warn or preannounce any bad news, it gets really interesting as

traders almost fall over themselves to get a piece of the action. So, just

about 10 days before actual earnings start flooding the airwaves, we

generally see stocks start inching higher.

But what happens when they actually report? More times than not the stock

gets a smackdown, even if it's just temporary. Why would that be? Well the

report is never as glowing as people want it to be. Even if a company

beats their numbers they rarely do by a measure that gets everyone

excited. Then of course there is the conference call to deal with.

Remember earnings are posted for the quarter that just ended. Like

yesterday's news. Traders want to know what's coming down the pike now.

We have watched earnings seasons for many years now. Almost every time,

we get a lift into them and then we get a pullback when they are about

done with as everyone looks around and says "that's it?" The most important

thing we can tell you is do not hold a stock over its earnings report. Yes,

you might miss a big gap open the next day and yes, you may be locked out when

a stock gets upgrade after upgrade. We know. It's called "missed money".

But we have all seen the effects of a bad earnings report or a cautious

outlook for the future. It's not uncommon for a stock that ends a day at 50

to open at 40 the next day on a poor report. Is the risk/reward worth that

kind of pounding? Not on your life. In fact, the last time we did a

comparison study, almost 74% of all the stocks that reported earnings sunk,

even if they beat the estimates. That is a number we simply cannot ignore.

So, yes it stinks when you miss a big spike, but it stinks considerably less

than being down 12 bucks in a stock that got beaten!

Larry Potter is a recognized authority on the subject of trading

and has been publishing his newsletter, Stocks2Watch®, since January

of 1998. For a 2-week trial and a 8-part FREE report on

Technical Analysis in easy to understand language, click here

http://urlcutter.com/StockWatchers

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