Companies Are Gaming The System To Beat Wall Street Expectations

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DAVE CARPENTER | 10/25/09 02:03 PM | AP

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CHICAGO — More than 80 percent of major companies reporting third-quarter results this month have beaten Wall Street expectations. So is business that good? No. Are companies gaming the system? Yes.

Corporate America has a habit of low-balling the earnings forecasts used by analysts to determine their estimates. That way, the bar is lower, and companies can easily jump over when the quarter's results are announced – even if profits and revenues have fallen off a cliff.

"Over the last decade, there's been a distinctive tendency for companies to underpromise and overdeliver," says Dirk van Dijk, chief equity strategist of Zacks Investment Research. "Lately companies are being even more cautious. They realize investors can very harshly punish any company that disappoints."

Beating expectations generally gives share prices a quick lift, but the news can mislead investors about the real state of the business – and just how far this economic recovery has to go. In fact, of the companies reporting third-quarter results so far, 60 percent have posted lower net income compared with a year ago.

Still, the recession has, if anything, accelerated the flow of positive earnings "surprises" as companies play it safe and issue more conservative earnings forecasts. Over the past two years, 65 percent of earnings reports have beaten estimates. Even after last fall's financial crisis, the following two quarters produced nearly twice as many beats as misses.

And this quarter, 81 percent of the first 199 companies listed on the Standard & Poor's 500 index that reported earnings came in above expectations.

The expectations game works like this.

Corporation X announces weeks or months ahead of time that it expects to earn, say, 55 to 60 cents per share. Analysts look at various measures of the company's financial and operating performance while compiling forecasts, but rely heavily on guidance from management. The resulting consensus forecast might be around 57 cents a share.

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On earnings day, the company then reports 61 cents per share. It can rightfully say it beat analyst expectations, and shares rise. Other investors jump on the bandwagon.

The company has some ability to control the number since analysts and most media focus on the so-called adjusted earnings, which can leave out huge one-time charges such as write-offs for restructuring expenses that otherwise could drag down overall results.

The expectations game has been played since the 1990s, when analysts' aggregate predictions became widely available on the Internet.

But the focus on expectations can distract investors from more meaningful numbers. This past summer, earnings stories trumpeted how banks did better than expected. But in stressing the surprise factor, many investors lost sight of the fact that earnings were down considerably for most banks and that troubles still shadow the sector.

In the last 15 years, 61 percent of earnings reports by the nation's largest publicly traded companies – those listed on the S&P 500 – have surpassed Wall Street's consensus estimates. Only 21 percent fell short, while 18 percent matched estimates, according to Thomson Reuters data.

There has never been a single quarter during that period when more companies have missed earnings than beat the Street.

Some companies are more blatant about managing expectations than others.

Apple Inc. is notorious for lowballing its outlooks. The computer maker topped analysts' estimates on Monday for the 27th quarter in a row. It has not come up short on earnings day since the first quarter of 2001. Apple declined to comment on the trend.

Then there's Cisco Systems Inc., which once beat forecasts by exactly 1 cent per share for 13 straight quarters, from 1998-2001. Coming within a penny so many times during that period merely shows the company was "conservative and transparent in communicating quarterly business conditions to investors," according to spokesman Terry Alberstein.

Stock analysts cannot automatically be blamed for consistently erring on the low side. Until results become public, they must depend in large part on what companies disclose about their performance. A company may deliberately give low guidance so it can top expectations, but that's hard for analysts to counter without evidence.

Brian Marshall, a technology analyst for the brokerage firm Broadpoint AmTech, says Apple's guidance is "almost absurdly low" but there's only so much analysts can do.

"The funny part is, people, including myself, try to see through it," he says.

He inputs hundreds of numbers into his forecast model each quarter, such as gross profit margin, average selling price for various products, the company's past guidance and earnings, and data from other manufacturers and suppliers. Analysts also weigh whether a company has a history of issuing earnings results that do not include special accounting charges.

Marshall's estimates for Apple's latest quarter were the highest on Wall Street. Yet the company topped his expectations by 16 cents per share and $200 million in sales. Its stock jumped 5 percent on the news.

Analysts also may have their reasons for wanting to stay on management's good side.

Companies are required to disclose material information to all investors at the same time. But their top executives can still show up at a firm's annual conference or talk about the industry, notes David Weild, senior adviser at accounting firm Grant Thornton.

"It's pretty widely known that the big-cap companies who are highly sought after can withhold access to get the results they're looking for, and that includes managing down expectations," Weild says.

Carefully managed by companies or not, expectations matter.

A study of stock returns from 1994-2007 concluded that analyst forecasts were the second-most influential force on price movements. Management forecasts topped the list, according to Beverly Walther, an accounting professor at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management who co-authored a newly released report.

Estimates by analysts carry particular impact when results do not match up. A company's stock price tends to fall much more on a "negative surprise," or miss, than it rises on a positive surprise. Either way, the momentum from beating or missing an estimate can affect a company's stock price for weeks afterward, Walther said.

But the market impact may be a bit more muted than it was before last year's meltdown. Failing to meet expectations still moves the market, but "it's not as dramatic now," says Matt Lloyd, chief investment strategist for Advisors Asset Management, an investment advisory firm.

"There's a lot of cynicism right now toward estimates – among investors, among everybody," Lloyd says. Because so many economists and analysts failed to see the financial crisis coming, he says, "there's a little more paranoia and distrust."

___

AP Technology Writer Jessica Mintz in Seattle contributed to this report.

CHICAGO — More than 80 percent of major companies reporting third-quarter results this month have beaten Wall Street expectations. So is business that good? No. Are companies gaming the system? ...
CHICAGO — More than 80 percent of major companies reporting third-quarter results this month have beaten Wall Street expectations. So is business that good? No. Are companies gaming the system? ...
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- sabredance I'm a Fan of sabredance 21 fans permalink

So, um, analysts have been taking dictation from companies and publishing the results as estimates of earnings.

Kind of like journalists taking dictation from politicians and playing games of he said, she said.

Can anyone explain why either group gets paid?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:42 PM on 10/27/2009

End the war in iraq. End Guantanamo. NO more tax haven for the rich. NO more bailouts.

Reinstate COLA. Pass another stimulus designed specifically for JOB CREATION

good articles; http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com

Obama please reform heath care and get unemployment benefits passed ASAP

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 AM on 10/27/2009
- NWBrunette I'm a Fan of NWBrunette 58 fans permalink

Businesses being less than honest about their numbers? Oh my! What an amazing scoop. Give this dude a Pulitzer. My goodness, how would anyone have ever known?

This "habit of low-balling" isn't news. Its Business 101.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:14 PM on 10/26/2009

Is there a story here?

What needs to happen is for Wall St analysts to get off their behinds, take the spoon out of their mouth that has carried the pablum from the managements they cover, and actually do some independent research.

Of course, the best analysts left wall street years ago for hedge funds, thanks to the dot com reform measures.

Wonder what unintended consequences we are in line for now?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:06 PM on 10/26/2009

The stock market is a rigged game. Anyone who invests in it without first figuring out how it works is a fool. Gold and silver are simple to understand, more stable, and much harder to manipulate. Unless transparency and proper accounting rules are restored to the stock market, anyone who continues investing in it is a fool who will lose money.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 PM on 10/26/2009
- changeself I'm a Fan of changeself 50 fans permalink

if a small grassroot organization like acorn tries to help the underclass survive the rotten inhumane system,

the people's representatives quickly cut the lifeline (funding) off. how dare they try to game the holy system.

but if the banks game the system, why, the people's government reward the gamers with trillions of people's money.

even george owell didn't see this coming.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:06 PM on 10/26/2009
- leduck I'm a Fan of leduck 37 fans permalink
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Time for,
HUFFPO TALKING POINTS MEMO:

1. Blame WALL STREET for Recession and all your current economic woes.

2. Blame Speculators for last year's $4.00 gas
a. Now ignore last year's $4.00 gas.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 AM on 10/26/2009
- changeself I'm a Fan of changeself 50 fans permalink

$4 gas was a handy work of the wall street speculators.

so all you need is number 1:

blame all the economic woes on wall street.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 10/26/2009
- leduck I'm a Fan of leduck 37 fans permalink
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I think PEAK OIL had something to due with $4.00 gas
I think the sepculator thing was overblown

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 PM on 10/26/2009
- sposton I'm a Fan of sposton 168 fans permalink
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The situation is much worse than most of us expect. We are being manipulated by both corporations and the government which for works for them. Have you ever heard of Plunge Protection Team?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Working_Group_on_Financial_Markets

The US is functionally bankrupt by any standards which would be used in any other country. The whole thing is being propped up now by propaganda and market manipulations. The target is our faith in the system because there is nothing more than our faith that undergirds this thieving system. Our faith is the last bubble which will burst sooner or later.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:29 AM on 10/26/2009

Wow, you just figured out the USA is bankrupt LOL!

1. THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS BANKRUPT.

2. THE STATE GOVERNMENTS ARE BANKRUPT.

3. MUNICIPAL AND COUNTY GOVERNMENTS ARE BANKRUPT.

4. CORPORATE FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS ARE BANKRUPT.

5. THE AMERICAN CONSUMER IS DROWNING UP TO HIS EYEBALLS IN DEBT AND IS BANKRUPT.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 AM on 10/26/2009
- sposton I'm a Fan of sposton 168 fans permalink
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And the root cause of all of this is the way we create money in this country. Want a real change? Change this and we are no longer bankrupt! Our bankruptcy is itself and illusion created by our acceptance of the current thieving system as the only possible system. Ours is truly a crisis of imagination.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 PM on 10/26/2009

This has been going since the inception of the stock market. I am not saying it is right, but that is the truth.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 AM on 10/26/2009
- Jeff Kreisler - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of Jeff Kreisler 11 fans permalink

Duh. That's the whole point. Manage expectations. Cash out. Move to Namibia.

This is the whole point of this book I've heard about...

GET RICH CHEATING - A Boston Globe Bestseller
"You'll be laughing all the way to the bank, assuming other cheaters haven't forced it into bankruptcy yet." - Rachel Maddow
http://tinyurl.com/ojfl3z
http://GetRichCheating.com

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:08 AM on 10/26/2009
- changeself I'm a Fan of changeself 50 fans permalink

there's no way to get so filthy rich so quick without cheating, period.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:10 PM on 10/26/2009
- menlopian I'm a Fan of menlopian 4 fans permalink

No one is wronged if a management team communicates realistic expectations regarding its business prospects and then exceeds them. That is prudence, not "cheating". What is wrong is when companies overstate their profits through creative accounting, etc.; that only works in the short run- in the long-run companies that do this always get caught.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:58 PM on 10/26/2009
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It is actually worse. The estimates are in US GAAP ("official accounting") while most of the reports are not.

This means companies can report practically whatever number they want by choosing what to consider non-recurring.

Most of the GAAP numbers are BELOW expectations, excepts nobody bothers to check them.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 AM on 10/26/2009
- MadHeart I'm a Fan of MadHeart 122 fans permalink

If you must invest, you should be able to look at the companies' books, at their profit & loss statement, not on what they "forecast". That's a fool's game.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:21 AM on 10/26/2009
- menlopian I'm a Fan of menlopian 4 fans permalink

This is not unethical or a "game"- it is sound business practice to underpromise and over-deliver because consequences of missing expectations is far greater than the benefits achieved by setting expectations high. In the long- run these things do not matter because the value of the business will eventually be reflected in the stock price, either to the upside or the downside.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 AM on 10/26/2009
- MadHeart I'm a Fan of MadHeart 122 fans permalink

This article just clarified why ETFs are being touted by Wall St. ETFs take pieces of stock, and bind them up in securities based on indices. This is just another securities scheme, like the housing bubble, that will help to take down the US economy even further. Hasn't anyone seen the State St. (SPDR) ads promoting this latest theft of your money? It's the latest trendy "investment" on Wall St.

Cheeeez. You'd be better off putting your spending money under your mattress.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:16 AM on 10/26/2009
- rekk I'm a Fan of rekk 8 fans permalink

I'll still never understand these businesses. Don't ANY of these execs realize that the longevity of the system is in their own best interests? I mean, what worth is it to make millions today if tomorrow the currency tanks and your mother doesn't have a home? I just wonder what school of economics these guys went to that would teach them that inflation is good, stealing is better and carrying around large amounts of debt the best of all worlds.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:51 AM on 10/26/2009

What good is it if mom doesn't have a home? The guys who made it tank do have their homes and that's all they care about.

It is all about greed.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:01 AM on 10/26/2009
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If they make millions today, they can buy their mother a home.

Not only do they not care about the longevity of the system, but they have convinced themselves that the system NEEDS them.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 AM on 10/26/2009
- Soulsurfer I'm a Fan of Soulsurfer 29 fans permalink

"Sandbagging" is as old as betting itself. The "game" on "The Street" has been rigged forever, but somehow retains an air of respectability. We should treat these guys with the disdain they deserve, even if they do wear nice suits and expensive shoes.....­..........­..........­.....

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:46 AM on 10/26/2009
- rkimball I'm a Fan of rkimball 3 fans permalink

speculators, inside traders & corporations are at it again. the markets will come down again like a house of cards. the small investor & the 401ks will be the biggest losers at the expense of the few big players.

wall street is nothing but a fixed racketeering, shell game, mafia run organization with a legal license to steal. where is all this talk of banking & wall street reform from obama?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:30 AM on 10/26/2009
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Your 401K does NOT need to be invested in equities.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:15 AM on 10/26/2009
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