NEW YORK, Jan. 6, 2016 /PRNewswire/ -- S&P Capital IQ and SNL, a business unit of McGraw Hill Financial (NYSE: MHFI) and a leading provider of research, analytics and data, released a new research note today which charts the impact of corporate earnings guidance on a company's stock price.

The report, What Does Earnings Guidance Tell Us? analyzes the stock market performance of Russell 3000 companies following the issuance of positive and negative corporate earnings guidance between 2003 and 2015 using the S&P Capital IQ Estimates database. It finds that negative guidance by company management, which is common and foreshadows quarterly earnings performance below analysts' consensus estimates, is correlated with negative short-term stock performance, but has no material impact on longer-term performance. Conversely, positive guidance, in which company management signals they will beat consensus earnings estimates, is associated with significant stock price gains over short- and longer-term time horizons.

Following were the report's key findings:




    --  Positive Earnings Guidance Drives Stock Gains: When management issues
        optimistic guidance (guidance that is higher than consensus estimates),
        the 3-day excess return surrounding the announcement date was 3.07% over
        the study period. Over longer time horizons, companies yielded excess
        return of 1.3% and 2.5% during the one- and three-month periods
        following a disclosure of optimistic earnings guidance.


    --  Negative Earnings Guidance Drives Short-Term Declines: When companies
        issue conservative guidance (guidance that is lower than consensus
        estimates), the 3-day excess return was -4.17%. Over longer time
        horizons, the results were not statistically significant over the study
        period.


    --  Building a 'Good News' Portfolio: A portfolio formed by purchasing
        companies with positive guidance news over the last month outperformed
        the market by 0.69% per month after controlling for market, size, value
        and momentum risk premia.
    --  Negative Guidance Far More Common than Positive Guidance: The
        conventional wisdom on earnings guidance is that corporations use it as
        a means to temper market expectations ahead of earnings season, so they
        can beat consensus estimates. Indeed nearly 70% of quarterly earnings
        guidance fell below consensus estimates during the study period.

"Intuitively, all investors read into company earnings guidance as an indicator of management sentiment for the future, but there's always been uncertainty around the precise correlation between the tone of that guidance and subsequent stock performance," said Dave Pope, managing director, Quantamental Research, S&P Capital IQ. "Our research proves that investors should listen closely when corporate management announces good news, particularly when it's announced prior to an earnings release."

The new research note, What Does Earnings Guidance Tell Us? was produced as part of the S&P Capital IQ Quantamental Research team's ongoing Event Driven Investing Series. To access the full research note, please click here.

About S&P Capital IQ and SNL

S&P Capital IQ and SNL Financial, a business unit of McGraw Hill Financial (NYSE:MHFI), is a leading provider of financial and industry data, research, news and analytics to investment professionals, government agencies, corporations, and universities worldwide. The newly combined firm integrates news, comprehensive market and sector-specific data and analytics into a variety of tools to help track performance, generate alpha, identify investment ideas, understand competitive and industry dynamics, perform valuation and assess credit risk. For more information, visit www.spcapitaliq.com or www.snl.com.

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SOURCE S&P Capital IQ and SNL