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Earnings season: three numbers that move stocks

An EPS beat often makes the headline, but the market usually moves on the quality of revenue, margins, and guidance. These three numbers decide whether the profit can be trusted.

Earnings season and the key numbers for stocks

Earnings season is when narrative meets numbers. A stock can fall after an EPS beat if guidance weakens, and rise after an EPS miss if the market sees improving margins or future demand.

1. Revenue growth: is demand still healthy?

Revenue growth shows whether a company's products or services still have demand. For growth companies, revenue growth is proof that the total addressable market is more than a story.

Watch the quality of revenue too. Revenue that grows on aggressive discounting, acquisitions, or one-off contracts is different in quality from stable recurring revenue.

2. Margins: does growth produce profit?

Margins help answer whether a company can turn sales into profit. Gross margin shows pricing power and production costs, while operating margin shows discipline on operating expenses.

Kerly takeaway Strong revenue without margin can signal expensive growth. Strong margin without revenue can signal temporary efficiency. The market likes the combination of both.

3. Guidance: the part that most often moves the price

Guidance is the bridge between past numbers and future expectations. The market prices stocks on expectations, so rising guidance can shift a valuation more than a small EPS beat.

Listen to the conference call to understand management's reasoning. Is guidance rising on structural demand, better pricing, cost efficiency, or just an easier base of comparison?

How to read the price reaction after earnings

  • Compare the result with consensus, not just with last year's number.
  • Watch the pre-market and the close, since the initial reaction often changes.
  • Watch volume: a reaction on heavy volume is more meaningful.
  • Compare the stock's reaction with its sector and index.

Research sources

FAQ

Is EPS the most important number?

EPS matters, but the market often focuses more on revenue quality, margins, cash flow, and guidance.

Why can a stock fall after a good report?

If expectations were already very high, a good report can still be seen as not enough. Valuation and positioning before earnings strongly shape the reaction.

This article is for stock-research education and not a recommendation to buy or sell any specific stock.