Abstract

Using the event study methodology, this study investigated the market reaction to trading statements released by a sample of the Top 100 Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) listed companies since the inception of the trading statement regulatory requirements in 2010. There appears to be significant information leakages before the release of trading statements. The share prices on the JSE shows a tendency to incorporate more timely sources of information before the release of trading statements. The results show a differential market reaction in the pre-announcement period. For profit warnings, the market seems to have largely impounded the expected poor earnings before the announcement. In the case of profit upgrades, the market appears to be more cautious and requires confirmatory information for a further positive reaction. A post-announcement earnings drift occurs for a period of thirty days after the announcement. This is contrary to the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) which asserts that new information is reflected in share prices almost immediately. This allows investors and portfolio managers with a trading strategy to outperform the market by investing in companies announcing profit upgrades and profit warnings. The observed market inefficiency can be mitigated by managers disseminating the earnings surprise information to a wide range of stakeholders and market participants rather than relying only on the mandatory regulatory announcement.

Highlights

  • There have been many studies that have evaluated the market reaction to companies making regular earnings announcements (Beaver, McNichols & Wang 2018; Cox 2020)

  • During the first half of the pre-announcement period, the share prices of both profit upgrades and profit warnings show a tendency to move in the expected direction but the cumulative abnormal returns of 0.94% and -1.33% are not statistically significant

  • A possible explanation for this market behaviour is provided by Kornik (2005) who showed that Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) companies reporting annual earnings, 85% of the abnormal share returns had occurred in the “good news” portfolio and 98% in the “bad news” portfolio before the announcement day

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Summary

Introduction

There have been many studies that have evaluated the market reaction to companies making regular (official) earnings announcements (Beaver, McNichols & Wang 2018; Cox 2020). Trading statements are different from regular earnings because they report. It can be expected that the market reaction to the cautionary announcements of trading statements will be different from the regular earnings announcements. Previous studies have mainly investigated the market reaction to profit warnings but few studies have investigated profit upgrades To rectify this deficiency, it was decided to investigate the market reaction to trading statement releases which covers both profit warnings and profit upgrades. This study investigated the market reaction to trading statements released by a sample of companies listed on the JSE Securities Exchange (JSE) during the period April 2010 to March 2018

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