Earnings Estimate

Earnings Estimate

Table of Contents What Is an Earnings Estimate? Understanding Earnings Estimate Example of an Earnings Estimate Special Considerations An earnings estimate is an analyst's forecast for a public company's future quarterly or annual earnings per share (EPS). Investors rely heavily on earnings estimates to gauge a company's performance and make investment decisions about it. Most investors use a consensus earnings estimate, a forecast of a Current Qtr. (Jun 2021) Next Qtr. (Sep 2021) Current Year (2021) Next Year (2022) Avg. Estimate Low Estimate High Estimate Year Ago EPS No. of Analysts Source: Yahoo! Finance Earnings surprises occur when a company misses the consensus estimate either by earning more than expected or less. It’s been found that the stocks of firms with substantial positive earnings surprises tend to perform above average, and the stock prices with substantial negative earnings surprises perform below average. An earnings estimate is an analyst's estimate for a company's future quarterly or annual earnings per share (EPS).

What Is an Earnings Estimate?

An earnings estimate is an analyst's estimate for a company's future quarterly or annual earnings per share (EPS). Future earnings estimates are arguably the most important input when attempting to value a firm. By placing estimates on the earnings of a firm for certain periods (quarterly, annually, etc.), analysts can then use cash flow analysis to approximate fair value for a company, which in turn will give a target share price.

Investors often rely on earnings estimates to analyze different stocks and decide whether to buy or sell them.

Understanding an Earnings Estimate

Analysts use forecasting models, management guidance, and fundamental information on the company to derive an EPS estimate. Market participants rely heavily on earnings estimates to gauge a company's performance. So whether a company meets, beats, or misses its earnings estimates can impact the price of the underlying stock, particularly in the short term.

Analysts' earnings estimates are often aggregated to create consensus estimates. These are used as a benchmark against which the company's performance is evaluated. When you hear that a company has "missed estimates" or "beaten estimates," it's usually in reference to consensus estimates.

A few companies, such as Refinitiv and Zacks Investment Research, compile estimates and compute the average or consensus. Their forecasts can be found in stock quotations or financial publications such as The Wall Street Journal. Consensus numbers can also be found at a number of financial websites such as Yahoo! Finance, Bloomberg, Visible Alpha, Morningstar.com, and Google Finance.

Published consensus earnings estimates frequently are reflected in the stock price of a company. But sometimes they have an adverse effect. The shares of firms with high earnings estimates tend to falter as the companies' performance doesn't live up to the market's expectations — they can easily disappoint. Conversely, firms with low earnings estimates tend to perform better than anticipated — because of the low bar: They've nowhere to go but up.

Example of an Earnings Estimate

Earnings estimates are found by looking up individual stocks, Take, for example, Amazon (AMZN). Here is a roundup of its consensus earnings estimates, as of Jun. 7, 2021.

Amazon Earnings Per Share Estimates

Earnings Estimate

Current Qtr. (Jun 2021)

Next Qtr. (Sep 2021)

Current Year (2021)

Next Year (2022)

Avg. Estimate

Low Estimate

High Estimate

Year Ago EPS

No. of Analysts

Source: Yahoo! Finance

Special Considerations

Earnings surprises occur when a company misses the consensus estimate either by earning more than expected or less. If the firm manages to beat the earnings estimate, it is called a positive or upside surprise. If the firm fails to reach the earnings estimate, it is called a negative surprise.

Here is how Amazon's performance, vis-à-vis surprises, has worked out over 2020-2021 YTD:

Earnings History

Source: Yahoo! Finance

As with the earnings estimates themselves, earnings surprises affect stock prices. It’s been found that the stocks of firms with substantial positive earnings surprises tend to perform above average, and the stock prices with substantial negative earnings surprises perform below average.

As a result, companies often manage their earnings carefully to ensure that consensus estimates are not missed. Companies that consistently beat earnings estimates outperform the market. So some companies set expectations low by providing forward guidance that results in consensus estimates that are low relative to likely earnings. This results in the company consistently beating consensus estimates — and the earnings surprise becoming less and less surprising.

Related terms:

Bear Market : Phases & Examples

A bear market occurs when prices in the market fall by 20% or more. read more

Consensus Estimate

A consensus estimate is a forecast of a public company's projected earnings based on the combined estimates of all equity analysts that cover the stock. read more

What Is an Earnings Surprise?

An earnings surprise occurs when a company's reported quarterly or annual profits are above or below the analysts' expectations. read more

Earnings Per Share (EPS)

Earnings per share (EPS) is the portion of a company's profit allocated to each outstanding share of common stock. Earnings per share serve as an indicator of a company's profitability. read more

Fair Value

Fair value can refer to the agreed price between buyer and seller or, in the accounting sense, the estimated worth of various assets and liabilities. read more

Forward Guidance

Forward guidance refers to the communication from a central bank about the state of the economy and likely future course of monetary policy. read more

Forward Price-To-Earnings (Forward P/E)

Forward price-to-earnings (forward P/E) is a measure of the P/E ratio using forecasted earnings for the P/E calculation.  read more

Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio

The price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is the ratio for valuing a company that measures its current share price relative to its per-share earnings. read more

Security Analyst

A security analyst is a financial professional who studies various industries and companies, provides research and valuation reports, and makes buy, sell, or hold recommendations. read more

Stock Quote

A stock quote is the price of a stock as quoted on an exchange that may include additional information about the security. read more