This page has been archived and commenting is disabled.
SocGen Explains Why "Shorting During US Reporting Season" Is A Bad Idea
Three months ago we laid out the best known trick in the public company playbook, i.e., how to beat earnings with atomic watch precision. The answer, presented in the following chart from Deutsche Bank, demonstrated why the average EPS beat in the past 4 years has been about 3.3%. The reason: the average EPS cut just prior to reporting had been -4.0%, or more than the average beat.
Today it is the turn of French bank SocGen to look at the earnings "charade" and try to build a case for shorting the market after the season is over as the downgrades resume.
Here is SocGen's Andrew Lapthorne's reasoning why "Equity rally will fade once the reporting cheating season is behind us"
The resurgence in risk appetite can be put down to central bank support, with the ECB and China either cutting rates or intimating that they are prepared to do more, and of course the charade that is quarterly company reporting. As our readers will be well aware, we have long highlighted the game corporate investor relationship departments play with analysts. To the extent that many companies apparently now simply tell analysts what numbers they should submit to the consensus, numbers which inevitably they then beat a couple of weeks later.
This relationship is, in our view, clearly seen below:
During the busy reporting weeks, upgrades rise relative to downgrades only for this to reverse during ‘quiet’ periods when companies revert to guiding numbers back down again. Why is this important? Well a market being “positively” surprised tends to rise; history shows that during the busiest reporting weeks the S&P 500 has risen 60% of the time versus less than 50% during the quietest weeks. The simple message is this: don’t be short during US reporting seasons. However given weak trend earnings momentum (see page 13), shorting the market thereafter could be worth considering.
Fair point, however one can quickly counter with another even more "bullish" thesis: once earnings season is over and the buyback blackout period ends, the year-end stock repurchases go all out: after all management teams have to max out those equity-linked bonuses. And, as a reminder, in November and December alone is when nearly a quarter of all annual buybacks take place.
And with both buybacks in 2015 and debt issuance set to make record highs, it is virtually assured that the amount of buybacks at the end of 2015, courtesy of who else but the Fed, will be truly unprecedented as the market does everything possible to close at new all time highs.
- 6629 reads
- Printer-friendly version
- Send to friend
- advertisements -






Let me explain why being short stocks while the world's central banks print like drunken sailors is a bad idea...
As the supply of the currency increases, the value of the currency which stocks are priced in decreases, thus it takes more units of currency to purchase each share of stock, so the price of the stock goes up, but only in nominal terms.
Love that curve. Your only allowed to bet one way, BTFD. Every day they get out the same old script and go through the motions, but randomness is starting to show up and crapping on the narrative. They are just one really chaotic event away from a mushroom cloud in the markets.....
I recall there is a word for those functions where the curve gets steeper and steeper.
Extravagant? No.
Extraordinary? No.
Exceptional? No.
Exponential! That is it.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-10-27/boehner-debt-ceiling-deal-proce...
""Shorting During US Reporting Season""
Better be shorting tonight, bitchez...
http://redefininggod.com/2015/10/globalist-agenda-watch-2015-update-84-2...
Powerful lesson. Log scale may work better.
I wonder if a put with an inflation-adjusted strike price can be constructed.
title too wordy. shorting is a bad idea period.
A blatant admission of the gross manipulation of the phony, so-called 'market'.
How the U.S. Treasury Avoided Chronic Deflation by Relinquishing Monetary Control to Wall Street
http://www.unz.com/mhudson/how-the-u-s-treasury-avoided-chronic-deflatio...
Soc Gen must have a large art department for all those pretty "caugh* caugh*", charts they draw.
IT IS ALL F'N FRAUD. THERE IS NO RIGHT OR WRONG. THERE IS ONLY INSIDE AND OUTSIDE.
In my opinion Crude Oil WTI currently shows no clear trend, which allows for intra-day trading on the smaller interval charts.
$43.30 - $49.80 are the trendless zones.
http://tripstrading.com/2015/11/02/oil-daily-neutral-area-between-43-30-...
transports closed gap from 10/26. small caps biotech spiked into 9/17 fed non action....very overbought...new month with no statements for another few weeks....time to harvest?
"SHORT"...is the best way to trade!
regardless, of what some may think