Estimates Data Overview & Reports Flashcards
Explain what an estimate is and how it fits into clients’ workflows Describe who makes estimates and who uses estimates Describe EPS methodology and why it can differ between brokers Explain key estimate terms Calculate future fiscal periods for given examples Navigate estimates reports in FactSet
1
Q
Who publishes and who uses estimates?
A
- Estimates data are generally produced by analysts on the buy-side and the sell-side. However, buy-side analysts only produce estimates for internal use. Therefore, when talking about estimates data, we usually refer to those published by the sell-side.
- Everyone (majority) on the buy-side uses estimates data, purchased from the sell-side, to make decisions about their portfolio holdings. Investment bankers use research published by their own equity or credit analysts as well to advise their own clients (there is often a Chinese wall between the investment banker and the research analysts).
2
Q
What are the three pieces of information found in every research report?
A
- Target Price
- EPS
- Recommendation (buy, hold, sell)
3
Q
What is a consensus?
A
The consensus is the average (mean or median) of detailed estimates.
4
Q
What is Facts Estimates consensus window? And how long is the default consensus?
A
The consensus window is the time period associated with estimates used in the consensus. By default, FactSet ignores estimates more than 100 days old.
5
Q
What is a surprise?
A
- The difference between a company‘s reported quarterly or annual earnings (company or broker actuals) and the consensus estimate for that quarter or year.
6
Q
What is guidance?
A
- The management’s expectations about the future financial performance of the company. These numbers guide the analysts in their estimates.
7
Q
What is actual?
A
- Actuals are collected from press releases or are broker actuals
- Company actuals: from press releases for the corresponding past period.
- Broker actuals: estimates after the event regarding the current unreported period - remember it takes 45-60 days to file financial statements. Between that time, analysts can still make predictions for the period.
8
Q
What is the majority methodology?
A
- Brokers do not have to follow the accounting standards when they make predictions.
- FactSet assigns the majority methodology (GAAP vs non-GAAP) to the default consensus. For example, if the majority of brokers report following the accounting standards, then FactSet will report this as the main consensus figure.
- Note: FactSet still reports the minority methodology as well.
9
Q
What is the Sharp Consensus?
A
- A more accurate measure than the “normal” consensus. It identifies the revision patters within the default consensus window. It then creates a custom window and reports a new consensus called the Sharp Consensus.