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Services Resources Corporate
November 21, 2009
Ken Trester

Gear up for Earnings Cycle Profits

By Ken Trester

Although there are thousands of options contracts changing hands on any given day, when is the best time to buy options?

When it comes to investing your money, the answer truly is: It depends. There are no hard-and-fast rules for buying and selling options. However, a great time to find potentially profitable trading opportunities is in conjunction with publicly traded companies' quarterly earnings reports.


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As a general rule, earnings reports affect short-term options traders who hold positions for a matter of weeks or days because earnings season focuses attention on very near-term goals.

For active options traders, earnings season can be a time of both up- and downside volatility for particular stocks and/or sectors. The temporary dips or charges aren't usually of concern to "buy-and-hold" investors. But because options only have a limited time to pay out, earnings reports can mean sudden profits or losses.

Buying options, though, for earnings bets can be a much-less-expensive, less-risky way to test your hunches about the effects of earnings on a company.

Publicly owned companies must, by law, report their earnings every three months. The four earnings seasons last approximately six weeks and begin in mid-January, mid-April, mid-July and mid-October. However, there are earnings announcements released practically every trading day of the year, but the aforementioned seasons are when news (good or bad) is most-plentiful.

Wall Street analyzes mounds of data to create estimates for each company's earnings, and it doesn't like surprises. Investors can panic and sell for both negative and positive surprises, which can instantly lower premiums. The trick is knowing whether a discount premium is a flashing "buy" signal or a warning sign.

If a company's numbers don't hit expectations, investors fear that the company's future earnings will dwindle, which can send call premiums plummeting and put premiums soaring.

However, it's important to consider whether a company has cyclical earnings. Oil, agricultural, retail and entertainment/leisure firms all have seasonally weak quarters, but Wall Street's memory is short, and it often forgets to compare apples to apples.