Earnings momentum strategies are a risky way of navigating the upcoming corporate earnings season, which begins in mid-January.
I’m referring to strategies that favor the stocks of companies whose earnings growth is accelerating. According to theory as well as history, shares of such companies should outperform those with declining growth rates.
A perfect recent example is Tesla
TSLA,
Its earnings have been growing for several quarters now: From a loss in 2019 to profit of 25 cents a share, 44 cents a share, and 76 cents a share, respectively, in the first three quarters of last year. For the fourth quarter of 2020, which Telsa is slated to report on Feb. 3, FactSet reports that the consensus of Wall Street analysts is that the company will report EPS of 96 cents.
I need not remind you that Tesla’s stock price has shot up in
concert with its earnings, with a trailing 12-month gain of more than 737%
(according to FactSet).
There are two major reasons why I nevertheless caution against relying on earnings momentum strategies for picking which stocks to buy or sell in the upcoming earnings season.
The market reacts almost instantly to earnings surprises
The first is practical: Wall Street reacts almost instantly to earnings surprises. By instantly I mean a matter of seconds. By the time you or I read about unexpectedly good earnings, it will almost certainly be too late to profit from the news.
Imagine, for example, if Tesla reports a quarterly EPS in its Feb.
3 earnings report that is much higher than the current consensus of $0.96. You
can bet that the stock will rally almost instantaneously. That rally would
largely discount any remaining upside potential that earnings momentum
strategies used to be able to exploit.
This is what efficient market theorists tell us is inevitable with
any strategy that has shown great historical promise. As more and more
investors pile into a strategy, they kill the goose that lays the golden egg.
This helps to explain the deteriorating performance of what used
to be the newsletter industry’s most successful earnings momentum strategy. I’m
referring to the stock ranking system published by the Value Line Investment Survey. Each week, the newsletter reports the 100 stocks
(out of a universe of 1,700 widely-followed issues) that have the greatest
appreciation potential over the coming year. Though the newsletter’s ranking
system is proprietary, we do know that it is based largely on earnings surprise.
As you can see from the chart below, a portfolio of these 100 favored stocks from Value Line beat the S&P 500
SPX,
by a wide margin over the period from 1980 through the early part of this century, but has lagged ever since. (Full disclosure: Value Line is not one of the newsletter publishers that contracts with my…
Read More: Earnings momentum strategies made big money but are now losing the big mo’