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I've seen too many traders try to trade something on a hunch because they thought earnings were going to be a blowout.
It's much more complicated than that.
There's the EPS, top-line growth, expenses, one-time charges, and forward-looking statements that get reported.
I've seen companies beat by $0.02 per share, but the forward-looking statements are bearish or cautious and the stock sells off.
Trading on hunches is a gamble: you don't know the probabilities nor the expected values.
If you can't model it, you can't trade it.
By Michael Martin4.9
109109 ratings
I've seen too many traders try to trade something on a hunch because they thought earnings were going to be a blowout.
It's much more complicated than that.
There's the EPS, top-line growth, expenses, one-time charges, and forward-looking statements that get reported.
I've seen companies beat by $0.02 per share, but the forward-looking statements are bearish or cautious and the stock sells off.
Trading on hunches is a gamble: you don't know the probabilities nor the expected values.
If you can't model it, you can't trade it.

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