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Why Earnings Just Don’t Make Sense (Part 2)

Last time, I presented three reports on Google’s 2013 Q4 earnings announcement. Today I will discuss them.

First question: was this a good or bad earnings report?

Headline for Report #1: “Google misses, shares up.” That sounds like a bad report but a good outcome. On the other hand, if shares are up then maybe it’s a good report. “Misses” has a negative connotation though.

Right out of the gate, I’m confused.

Report #2 says “Google earnings top expectations.” This seems contradictory to Report #1, which said Google “missed.” Topping expectations is more consistent with the stock moving higher but then is Report #1 wrong about the miss? Maybe the judgment call refers to different measures (e.g. revenue, earnings, margins). Is the writing sloppy because the antecedent was not specified? Report #2 later clarifies by saying “Google’s earnings figures were pretty hot,” which tells us that earnings, at least, were good.

Report #3 says “strong revenue growth,” which suggests that revenue was good. Earnings and revenue were good, then, so what “missed” according to Report #1? Actually, Report #3 says revenue growth was strong but it says nothing about estimates. Maybe Google still missed its revenue estimates despite revenue being strong?

Report #3 goes on to say: “the search giant missed earnings expectations by a wide margin but wasn’t punished by traders.” Report #2 said earnings topped expectations. Which is it: did they top or did they miss by a wide margin? There’s no fuzziness with this comparison: they are in stark contrast with one another!

I will take a closer look at the numbers in the next post.

Comments (3)

[…] Last time, I began to discuss three reports on Google’s 2013 Q4 earnings announcement and ended up somewhat confused. Today I will focus closer on the numbers to see if we can gain some clarity. […]

[…] Intuitively, I would expect a stock to go up (down) following a good (bad) earnings report. Sometimes it may be hard to say what is good or what is bad, […]

[…] price changes stratified by good/bad earnings results. The biggest challenge would probably be determining consensus as to whether the results are good or bad. What estimates should be used? How do we define consensus? Should we look at earnings? Revenue? […]

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