Apple vs. Bank of America: When "Whisper Numbers" Come Home to Roost
Some of you who have been following earnings releases will be forgiven for not understanding why the market punished Apple (AAPL) after it released better-than-expected earnings (19%+ EPS surprise), while Bank of America (BAC) increased from $20/share to $32/share after showing that its net income decreased by 41%.
AAPL's stock was down at one point by 10%. Its growth prospects are still quite good, as market penetration in
The market makes no sense sometimes, except when it does. Earnings guidance is a game played between companies and analysts. When Apple (AAPL) tells Wall Street it expects 10% increase in sales, it does so with a wink. Apple gives the Street lower numbers so it can beat those numbers come earnings time. The Street, of course, is a formidable player. It accepts Apple's lowered expectations with a wan smile and then dumps it if the numbers aren't dramatically higher. The real numbers required to maintain or increase share price are sometimes referred to as "whisper numbers." Wall Street accepts the lower numbers on paper but demands that the company meet its whisper number later on. It's a strange song and dance that serves no one well.
AAPL went down while BAC went up because shares prices are based on how much money a company expects to earn in the future, not what it made last quarter. Therefore, the Street doesn't care about the actual numbers released - it knows it's all a game. The Street pays more attention to how well the company says it will do in the future, especially whether the company will maintain or increase full year guidance (i.e., whether the quarterly numbers released every three months will add up to the full year's "earnings per share" expectations).
What is an average investor to make of all this? Only that share prices are based more on future expectations of value than on past statistics. As they say in business - past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Disclosure: None
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This article has 14 comments:
You should also note that BAC's share price receives a lot of support from a very nice dividend yield. The stock has been excessively pummeled in recent months due to speculation of a dividend cut. CEO Ken Lewis reiterated in the conference call Monday that he would not recommend a dividend cut to the board. The stock jumped as soon as he said that.
The SEC enforcement of existing short sale rules has also likely contributed to BAC's rise the past few days. We can't overlook that little fact.
I wouldn't believe one word this guy has to say so long as he can write such an inane, ridiculous comment like that one...
Grime
No, but it's a good starting point. Look at the products Apple has on the table. Second to none. The new iPhone is flying off the shelves. Record sales of Macs. This company has plenty of potential.
Think about how many times the analysts said "everyone already has an iPod" and the growth just continued. That went on for years. Maybe the iPod growth has slowed, but now there's iPhone and whatever else is in the pipeline. The Mac growth potential alone is enough to keep my faith.
I know the Apple haters here will label me a fanboy of Apple. However not only was that beating down they took of 10%! totally uncalled for it makes me realize how incredibly stupid wall street is. How long has this game been going on? Seriously what years now? My dog Isis has caught on to the game for petes sake! Wall street is incapable of any kind of original thought or learning. We all KNOW Apple undercuts themselves in their guidance so they can blow the guidance away. This is not new its been going on for *years* now. Why don't all the "analysts" and "fund managers" just resign. Seriously. This is like watching a child repeatedly touching a hot burner and yet still not learn to stop touching it. "Ow!.. Ow!... Ow!..." Why does anyone listen to these clowns?
If Apple says 1.12 bank on 1.20. It's was laughable 5 years ago and now it's just boring and annoying. Go away Wall St. you are too dumb to play.
***WARNING APPL SHAREHOLDER***
Rafat
Small Fish
I am a (small) investor in Apple. While not a "fan boy" I do own several of their products (ok, more than several) and find them to be of excellent quality, offering superior value.
Over the course of the past several years I have watched with dismay at the volatile ride that this stock has had. I can draw only one conclusion: The extreme price fluctuations of this stock are being drive by the big money guys (hedge funds, institutional investors and the short sellers and option traders who feast on, and are responsible for, the wide price swings.
Why else would the stock of a company that has demonstrated consistently, quarter after quarter after quarter, strong historical growth in revenue, EPS and market share, a product development cycle second to none, world class marketing and a growing and very profitable retail sales channel, experience such apparently irrational price swings and extreme trading ranges?
I'm sorry to say that the only answer that I can offer is excessive "greed" and market manipulation.
murray