Editor's note: Ask TheStreet is designed to answer questions about the market, terms, strategies and investment methods. Please email us to ask a question, but keep in mind that we cannot offer specific investment- or stock-related advice.A stock I own reported great earnings this morning, but the price hasn't really gone up. After the stock's recent run-up, I assume this is due to some profit-taking. Any thoughts on this scenario?-- Submitted via
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It's hard to make short term assumptions about a stock. Stocks move up and down on any given day for countless reasons. And they usually move the most -- or at least attract the most
volume and attention -- when the company announces their quarterly earnings report because that's when they have the eyes of the investing world upon them.
GM (GM), for example, recently announced a first quarter (2008) loss amounting to $5.74 per share, reflecting $2.9 billion in one-time charges. Seems like a loss that big that would be bad news and send the stock plummeting, right? Wrong. Investors sent GM's shares up 9.4% that day because without the one-time charges, GM only lost $350 million (or 62 cents per share), handily beating Wall Street's expectations.
So, as Chuck Berry said, "It goes to show you never can tell."
GM's "one-time items" included a $1.45 billion charge to reflect a change in the value of GM's 49% share in GMAC Financial Services. Ray Young, GM's executive vice president and chief financial officer, said the company revalued its stake because of losses in GMAC's residential mortgage division.
After a company announces earnings, the "Monday morning quarterbacking" begins. It's easy for
analysts, traders, talking heads and the like to come up with reasons for a stock's short term move "ex post facto."
For many individual investors, it's comforting to have a reason -- any reason -- as to why a stock moved one way or another in the past. But what you need to understand is how it will move in the future, right?
Here's what happens. If a company announces great earnings and the stock goes down, the so-called "market" may be "saying" that it does not like the company's
guidance for the next quarter -- or next year. The market "commentators" may also attribute the drop in the stock -- after what seems like good news -- to be a result of profit-taking.
It's best to avoid that game entirely and think long term.
Some of the things that move stocks on any given day:
analyst opinions (yes, they still matter),
short covering, earnings, rumors and other news. And of course, stocks move with the broader market every day like a toy sailboat caught in the tide.
Don't chase that boat -- let's call it the good ship "Momentum" -- too far into the ocean and get caught in the undertow.
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