How Investors Trade Around Interim Earnings Announcements


Book Description

This study focuses on non-institutional trading behavior around interim earnings announcements in the emerging market. We separate the stock trading activity of Finnish households into five trading classes and compare the results to corresponding institutional trading. Data covering the years 1996-2000 shows that earnings news triggers trading in every trading classes. Before the event, especially active individuals show increased buying and selling activity compared to the non-event period. This finding supports Kim and Verrecchia's (1991a, b) proposition that announcement stimulates private information-gathering and trading. After the event we find that Finnish households in the most active investor class tend to follow a contrarian strategy, especially selling after the good news. This adds to previous evidence by Grinblatt and Keloharju (2000b). Further, individuals with active trading, perform better than the passive investors around the announcement. Finally, the impact of the announcement on institutional trading is clearly milder compared to that on the active investor classes.




Trading on Corporate Earnings News


Book Description

Profit from earnings announcements, by taking targeted, short-term option positions explicitly timed to exploit them! Based on rigorous research and huge data sets, this book identifies the specific earnings-announcement trades most likely to yield profits, and teaches how to make these trades—in plain English, with real examples! Trading on Corporate Earnings News is the first practical, hands-on guide to profiting from earnings announcements. Writing for investors and traders at all experience levels, the authors show how to take targeted, short-term option positions that are explicitly timed to exploit the information in companies’ quarterly earnings announcements. They first present powerful findings of cutting-edge studies that have examined market reactions to quarterly earnings announcements, regularities of earnings surprises, and option trading around corporate events. Drawing on enormous data sets, they identify the types of earnings-announcement trades most likely to yield profits, based on the predictable impacts of variables such as firm size, visibility, past performance, analyst coverage, forecast dispersion, volatility, and the impact of restructurings and acquisitions. Next, they provide real examples of individual stocks–and, in some cases, conduct large sample tests–to guide investors in taking advantage of these documented regularities. Finally, they discuss crucial nuances and pitfalls that can powerfully impact performance.




The Impact of Interim Earnings Announcements on the Permanent Price Effects of Trades on the Helsinki Stock Exchange


Book Description

The primary goal of this paper is to study whether the permanent price impact of large trades are greater before or after an interim earnings announcement on the Helsinki Stock Exchange. If the permanent price effects of large trades are greater before the announcement this would suggest that investors believe that some traders are better informed before the interim earnings announcement than after. Theoretical support is available that information asymmetry is greater prior to earnings announcements than after. The anticipation of a forthcoming public announcement stimulates the acquisition of private information, causing an increase in information asymmetry. This increase is facilitated by the flow of earnings-related information to the market (e.g., via pre-announcement communications by firms, actual earnings announcements of competitors, etc.). Thus investors gather information, make assessments, and form trading positions accordingly. In addition, compared to individuals (small investors), institutions (large investors) are better informed because they tend to have lower marginal costs of information gathering. Thus large trades are expected be monitored more closely on the trading screen and the information content for pricing purposes is expected to be larger for these trades than for corresponding small trades. Using permanent price effects as a measure of price adjustment for private information, tests were performed to see whether price adjustments are greater in pre-announcement periods than in post-announcement periods. The results, based on interim earnings releases, suggest that large trades do indeed produce greater permanent price effects before an announcement than after it. This suggests that large trades associated with price changes (especially uptick trades) before an announcement send a stronger signal to other investors than similar trades after the announcement. For small trades the results were insignificant.







Why Are Earnings Announcements So Important to Traders and Investors?


Book Description

This Element is an excerpt from Trading on Corporate Earnings News: Profiting from Targeted, Short-Term Options Positions (9780137084920) by John Shon, Ph.D., and Ping Zhou, Ph.D. Available in print and digital formats. Understand those crucial quarterly earning announcements: how they work, and how they impact stock prices. Quarterly earnings announcement are the most salient, most anticipated, regularly-recurring announcement that companies make. They are the most watched piece of information that comes directly from the people that know the business the best. They are also considered the most reliable source of information, largely because companies are subject to strict SEC Rule 10b-5 rules...




Intraday Trading Behavior Around Interim Earnings Announcements on the Helsinki Stock Exchange


Book Description

The purpose of the study is to investigate whether and how an anticipated information event such as an interim earnings announcement affects intraday trading on the Helsinki Stock Exchange, the HSE. The Finnish stock market, with its special characteristics, provides a suitable forum to study the robustness of previous findings produced in more developed stock markets (e.g. the US). The article finds evidence from the HSE that the widely documented U-shape pattern in trading activity - namely heavy trading in the beginning and at the end of the trading day and relatively light trading in the middle of the day - is affected by an anticipated information event (i.e. interim earnings announcement). Before the announcement day, trading is more concentrated at the close. This is consistent with investors' heterogeneous willingness to bear expected overnight risk, which is especially prevalent before an announcement. Moreover, a somewhat greater concentration of trading on the open is evident after the announcement day, indicating unexpected overnight information. The results of the paper further indicate that the change in the trading concentration pattern is associated with announcement-related factors, such as the range of analysts' earnings forecasts, the magnitude of unexpected earnings and firm size. This association is evident for the overall change in the trading pattern and to some extent during the transition between trading and non-trading regimes.




Impact of Investors' Trading Activity to Post-Earnings Announcement Drift


Book Description

This study focuses on post-earnings-announcement drift in an emerging market and whether it is associated with the trading activity of non-institutional trading around interim earnings announcements. We separate the stock trading activity of Finnish households into five trading classes. Data is all trades executed on the Helsinki Stock Exchange during 1996-2000. Results show that when earnings news contains only moderate price effects no clear evidence is found to show that trading by any of the specified non-institutional trading activity classes is particularly associated with price changes. However, excess buying of passive and intermediate individual investors after extremely negative earnings news seems to intensify the negative post-earnings returns. Also for extremely positive earnings news trading by individuals seems to be related to the post-earnings returns. In that sense post-earnings returns are related with the trading of non-institutional activity classes. However, the net trading of non-institutional investors with different trading activities on the announcement day does not affect the correlation between earnings surprises and subsequent returns. This suggests that the net trading of non-institutional investors' trading activity on the announcement event does not predict subsequent returns. Thus this result is consistent with that of Hirshleifer, Myers, Myers and Teoh (2003).




Pre-Disclosure Information Asymmetry and Information Content as a Means of Explaining Trading Volume Responses to Interim Earnings Announcements in a Thinly Traded Stock Market


Book Description

This study contains empirical findings regarding the effect of interim earnings announcements on investors' trading behavior. The aim of the paper is to empirically investigate whether the trading volume reaction to an interim earnings announcement is associated with the information content of the announcement and the existence of pre-disclosure information asymmetry in the Finnish stock market. The reason for using Finnish data is to establish whether findings from the US in respect of explaining volume inducement around an information event also hold in thin security markets. Pre-disclosure information asymmetry is proxied by the range in analysts' earnings forecasts. Information content is proxied by beta-adjusted returns and the divergence in reported EPS from analysts' mean EPS forecast. The data consist of 118 interim earnings announcements released by 21 firms traded on the Helsinki Stock Exchange (HSE) between 1992 and 1996. It was found that the trading volume reaction is positively associated with the information content of an announcement and also to some extent with the level of pre-disclosure information asymmetry. These results are in line with Kim and Verrecchia's theoretical trading volume proposition and with empirical findings in the US markets. Thus, previous findings produced in more developed stock markets with respect to volume generation around earnings announcements also seem to be applicable to thin markets. However, the significance levels are lower than in similar US studies and the association between positive and negative news is slightly asymmetric.




Investor Trading and the Post Earnings Announcement Drift


Book Description

We examine whether the two distinct post-earnings-announcement drifts associated with seasonal random walk-based and analyst-based earnings surprises are attributable to the trading activities of distinct sets of investors. We predict and find that small (large) traders continue to trade in the direction of seasonal random walk-based (analyst-based) earnings surprises after earnings announcements. We also find that when small (large) traders react more thoroughly to seasonal random walk- (analyst-) based earnings surprises at the earnings announcements, the respective drift attenuates. Further evidence suggests that delayed small trades associated with random walk-based surprises are consistent with small traders' failure to understand time-series properties of earnings, whereas delayed large trades associated with analyst-based surprises are more consistent with a longer price discovery process. We also find that the analyst-based drift has declined in recent years.




Use of Different Trading Environments Around Interim Earnings Announcements on the Helsinki Stock Exchange


Book Description

This paper tests the hypothesis that an anticipated information event (e.g. interim earnings announcement) affects the use of trading venues. Data from the Helsinki Stock Exchange are used where an upstairs market co-exists with an anonymous downstairs market. Trades are classified also as in-house trades and externalised trades. In this study, evidence is found that before the announcement event, the proportion of cross-broker trading in the downstairs market increases compared with trading in this mode during a non-announcement period. Correspondingly in-house trades in the upstairs market tend to decrease before the announcement. After the announcement upstairs trading recovers. Furthermore, the empirical findings show that the use of cross-broker trades in the downstairs market is negatively related to the trading activity and intraday price volatility during the pre-announcement period. After the announcement especially the volatility association changes resulting in increased downstairs trading with high volatility.