Earnings Reactions Database

Stop treating earnings like a one-day headline. Study what happened after the report.

18,567 US earnings events, organized so you can see which reactions kept going, which faded, and what happened after the first excitement passed.

Built from six months of collecting, cleaning, analyzing, and interpreting historical US stock behavior.

Live database sample

Scroll sideways and down. This is the raw sheet view, not a styled mockup.

Questions this helps answer

  • Which earnings moves kept going after the headline?
  • Which first reactions trapped late buyers?
  • What happened one month and three months later?
  • What conditions showed up before the better reactions?

The edge is not reading the earnings headline. The edge is knowing how similar reactions behaved afterward.

A stock can jump on earnings and still punish late buyers. It can also fall first, then recover. This database helps you separate the first emotional move from the later behavior that actually matters.

Avoid

reacting only to the headline or the first price spike.

Notice

which reactions held, faded, or followed through later.

Compare

one-month and three-month outcomes after similar reports.

Decide

whether an earnings move deserves patience or skepticism.

The important numbers, explained without trading jargon.

These are the basic facts that show the size and usefulness of the database.

18,567

earnings events studied

US earnings reactions organized into one research set.

70

industries covered

A broad view across many types of companies.

9,378

stocks that rose first

Examples where the immediate reaction was positive.

7,201

stocks that fell first

Examples where the immediate reaction was negative.

-9.1% to +8.9%

normal first-reaction range

A practical range for understanding ordinary post-report movement.

3 months

later behavior tracked

The study follows what happened after the first headline faded.

What is inside

A practical research database, not a pile of confusing spreadsheet labels.

You get an organized earnings-event database built to show the difference between an exciting first move and a move that actually continued. It is useful for investors who want to stop treating every earnings gap as the full story.

The report

  • Stock symbol
  • Company name
  • Report date
  • Before or after market
  • Revenue result
  • Profit result
  • Guidance update
  • Surprise direction

The first reaction

  • Opening move
  • High that day
  • Low that day
  • Closing move
  • First-hour behavior
  • Opening jump or drop
  • Did the move hold?

What happened later

  • One-month result
  • Three-month result
  • Best later price
  • Worst later price
  • Did the move continue?
  • Did the move fade?

Context for decisions

  • Industry
  • Company size
  • Prior trend
  • Market mood
  • How clean the example looks
  • Suggested use
  • Notes for reviewing it

Choose the single database or get all four for the better value.

Individual databases stay focused. The bundle gives you four types of US stock behavior for the price of two.

Individual database

Earnings Reactions Database

$58 one-time

Use this when you want to understand whether an earnings move has a history of lasting.

  • Full cleaned database
  • Plain-English field structure
  • Research notes and usage context

Better value

Full database bundle

$116 one-time

Four databases for the price of two: explosions, big runners, earnings reactions, and IPO lifecycle behavior.

  • All four US stock databases
  • More ways to compare current setups
  • Best option if you want the complete research layer