A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Whisper Estimates
(Difference between revisions)
|
|
| Line 1: |
Line 1: |
| - | Whisper estimates or whisper numbers are informal forecasts for blue chip companies' earnings or [[Economic Indicator|economic indicator]]s that circulate on markets a few hours before the information is published. They may be considerably different from the [[Consensus Estimates|consensus estimates]] collated and published by earnings tracking companies and news agencies some days earlier. A company may see its [[Stock|stock]] sold off if it fails to meet whisper numbers even though it matches the published consensus figures. Similarly, the effect on financial markets of key [[Economic Indicator|economic indicators]], such as U.S. [[Non-Farm Payrolls|non-farm payrolls]], may be much greater or much less than would be expected from consensus figures if they match or fail to match whisper estimates. | + | Whisper estimates or whisper numbers are informal forecasts for blue chip companies' earnings or [[Economic Indicator|economic indicator]]s that circulate on markets a few hours before the information is published. They may be considerably different from the [[Consensus Estimates|consensus estimates]] collated and published by earnings tracking companies and news agencies some days earlier. A company may see its [[Stock|stock]] sold off if it fails to meet whisper numbers even though it matches consensus estimates. Similarly, the effect on financial markets from the publication of key [[Economic Indicator|economic indicators]], such as U.S. [[Non-Farm Payrolls|non-farm payrolls]], may be very different from what would be expected from consensus figures if they match or fail to match whisper estimates. |
Revision as of 10:37, 13 November 2009
Whisper estimates or whisper numbers are informal forecasts for blue chip companies' earnings or economic indicators that circulate on markets a few hours before the information is published. They may be considerably different from the consensus estimates collated and published by earnings tracking companies and news agencies some days earlier. A company may see its stock sold off if it fails to meet whisper numbers even though it matches consensus estimates. Similarly, the effect on financial markets from the publication of key economic indicators, such as U.S. non-farm payrolls, may be very different from what would be expected from consensus figures if they match or fail to match whisper estimates.