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16. Follow Earnings Reports

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John Esther

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Earnings reports show how well a company is performing financially. Strong results can push prices up, while weak results can cause declines.
As an investor, this is where you connect business performance to stock price. Learning to read earnings reports helps you make more informed decisions instead of guessing.
 
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Earnings reports show how well a company is performing financially. Strong results can push prices up, while weak results can cause declines.
As an investor, this is where you connect business performance to stock price. Learning to read earnings reports helps you make more informed decisions instead of guessing.
Most beginners think strong earnings = price goes up, weak earnings = price goes down. But in practice, a company can report “great” numbers and still fall, because the market had already priced in something even better.

This is why experienced investors don’t just read earnings, they read positioning, expectations, and narrative around those earnings.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Chinyere
Earnings reports show how well a company is performing financially. Strong results can push prices up, while weak results can cause declines.
As an investor, this is where you connect business performance to stock price. Learning to read earnings reports helps you make more informed decisions instead of guessing.
Take companies like Apple or Tesla. There have been quarters where they delivered solid growth, yet the stock dropped. Why? Because:
  • Expectations were elevated
  • Guidance hinted at slowing momentum
  • Or the market was already fully positioned
So the real skill is not asking “Are the earnings good?”
It’s asking: “Relative to what the market believed, is this surprising?”
 
  • Like
Reactions: Chinyere
Earnings reports show how well a company is performing financially. Strong results can push prices up, while weak results can cause declines.
As an investor, this is where you connect business performance to stock price. Learning to read earnings reports helps you make more informed decisions instead of guessing.
Earnings reports are the financial heartbeat of a company. They reveal revenue, profit, margins, and growth trends—key signals for investors. Understanding them lets you link business performance to stock movements, making your decisions data-driven rather than guesswork. It’s a fundamental skill for smart investing.
 
Most beginners think strong earnings = price goes up, weak earnings = price goes down. But in practice, a company can report “great” numbers and still fall, because the market had already priced in something even better.

This is why experienced investors don’t just read earnings, they read positioning, expectations, and narrative around those earnings.
It’s not just the numbers that matter—it’s what the market expected. A company can report strong earnings and still drop if results fall short of expectations. Experienced investors focus on context: how results compare to forecasts, the story management tells, and the market’s positioning. That’s how you separate noise from real opportunity.
 
Take companies like Apple or Tesla. There have been quarters where they delivered solid growth, yet the stock dropped. Why? Because:
  • Expectations were elevated
  • Guidance hinted at slowing momentum
  • Or the market was already fully positioned
So the real skill is not asking “Are the earnings good?”
It’s asking: “Relative to what the market believed, is this surprising?”
It’s not just about whether earnings are “good” or “bad.” The key is comparing results to market expectations. Even strong growth can disappoint if investors were expecting more, or if future guidance signals a slowdown. Skilled investors focus on the surprise factor—how reality stacks up against what was already priced in—and make decisions from that perspective