A Tale of Two Mega-Caps
Why bad earnings are good...
WE'RE SMACK in the middle of another exciting earnings season, writes
Greg Guenther in Addison
Wiggin's Daily
Reckoning.
It's once again that magical time of the quarter when
investors become confused,
angry (or both!) when stocks don't react as they expect after filing their quarterly
updates.
Why are
earnings so tough on armchair investors?
It might have something to do with all
the confusing numbers and
analyst estimates floating around. Or maybe it's because the financial media stirs the pot by
quick-calling after-hours reactions,
only to update their coverage when a stock abruptly changes direction following the conference call
Q&A.
But the most frustrating part about earnings season is that stocks don't react appropriately once the
numbers hit the wire – at least,
not in the minds of most investors. More often than not, a stock will behave differently than one might
logically expect, even when
earnings perfectly adhere to analyst expectations.
Unfortunately, there's no
quick fix that will make
earnings season more palatable for the average investor. Companies will continue to dish out fresh
reports every three months, and
investors and traders will simply have to do their best to navigate the uncertainty.
As long as you're
involved in markets, you'll have to deal with the occasional earnings shenanigans. So it's best if you
learn to embrace the
madness...
Today, I'll show you that it is possible to ride the earnings wave
without losing your mind. The
secret to earnings zen doesn't involve scouring estimates, analyst reports, or insider transactions. You
simply need to learn how to
put the earnings announcements into context with the forces affecting a stock's price and
trend.
Let's check
out a couple of recent high-profile earnings reactions that have frustrated the investing
masses.
Earlier
this month we witnessed Tesla Inc. (TSLA) rally off 52-week lows, closing higher by more than 12% after
reporting an earnings
miss.
The very next day, investors were forced to watch Meta Platforms Inc.
(META) crater more than 15% after
beating both top and bottom-line estimates.
Moves like these are why so many
people are distrustful of the
stock market. They have no idea what to make of price action not matching up with top and bottom-line
numbers parroted on the
financial news.
The Tesla news alone unleashed more than its fair share of
angry comments across social
media.
Demand for EVs is falling off a cliff! Tesla's free cash flow flipped
negative! Profits are hitting
3-year lows!
But none of these facts prevented Tesla shares from rocketing off
their lows as traders appeared
blissfully unaware that anything could be wrong with the company's business prospects.
Meanwhile, Meta has
been a Wall Street darling since it bottomed in early 2023. Shares were up 450% from their 2022 lows
ahead of its earnings
announcement last week. The stock was also up 40% year-to-date ahead of earnings – the opposite action
we had seen from Tesla during
the first quarter.
While Tesla's financials were a mess, Meta actually posted
some impressive numbers. The
company beat earnings and revenue expectations for the quarter, extending its fiscal comeback from the
dark days of its metaverse
pivot in late 2021 – early 2022.
But slightly lower second-quarter expectations
stuck out to investors
despite the strong Q1 showing. After a perfect start to the year, sellers came out in full force and
sent the stock lower by
double-digits to its worst showing in 18 months.
To truly understand why the
market reacted as it did, we
have to zoom out and place the earnings into the context of the bigger price trends shaping these two
popular stocks.
On one hand, we have sputtering TSLA shares that have already coughed up more than 40%
year-to-date. TSLA broke from its
Magnificent Seven brethren in late December and spent most of the first quarter digging itself into a
deep hole.
Most investors expected the worst. In fact, sentiment couldn't have been more bearish
heading into last week's
announcement. Combine that with the strong downtrend and breakdown to fresh lows, and you have a recipe
for a big bounce on mediocre
results. Tesla only needed a report that was slightly better than apocalyptic to spark a short covering
rally. And that's exactly what
happened!
The opposite was true for Meta. The stock was on a historic run,
posting one of the best-looking
charts amongst the mega-caps extending back to the 2022 bear market lows. This strong uptrend plus the
fact that Meta shares extended
to new all-time highs following its previous earnings beat left little room for error.
Anything less than a
"perfect" earnings report would of course entice investors to take profits – which is exactly what
happened. Tesla just needed to
prove the wheels weren't falling off their cars to attract buyers, while Meta needed to dazzle analysts
and investors to maintain
its
Heck, even if this premarket drop holds, META shares won't completely fill
the earnings gap higher from
early February (the stock jumped 20%-plus following its last quarterly earnings release).
Bottom line:
earnings reactions are all about expectations – just not the expectations everyone talks about. You have
to separate the financials
from how the herd feels about a stock. The best way to do that is to analyze prices and trends.











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