Earnings Per Share
A company's net profit divided by its outstanding shares, the most fundamental measure of corporate profitability, the primary driver of long-run equity returns, and the basis for P/E ratio valuation.
The macro regime is unambiguously STAGFLATION DEEPENING. The hot CPI print (pending event, 24h ago) is not a surprise — it is a CONFIRMATION of the pipeline signals that have been building for weeks: PPI accelerating faster than CPI, Cleveland nowcast at 5.28%, breakevens rising +10bp 1M across the …
What Is Earnings Per Share?
Earnings Per Share (EPS) is the most fundamental measure of corporate profitability, the amount of net profit attributable to each share of common stock:
EPS = Net Income ÷ Weighted Average Shares Outstanding
For diluted EPS (the standard measure used by Wall Street), the denominator includes all shares that could potentially be created through stock options, RSUs, convertible securities, and warrants.
EPS is the single most important number in equity markets. Over any multi-year horizon, stock prices track earnings. A company that grows EPS at 12% per year will, on average, see its stock price compound at approximately the same rate. Everything else, sentiment, momentum, flows, narrative, creates noise around this earnings signal.
The S&P 500 EPS History
| Period | S&P 500 Operating EPS | Avg Annual Growth | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2000-2002 | $57 → $47 | -9%/yr | Dot-com bust; earnings recession |
| 2003-2007 | $47 → $92 | +14%/yr | Housing boom, financial leverage |
| 2008-2009 | $92 → $57 | -22%/yr | GFC; worst earnings collapse since 1930s |
| 2010-2019 | $57 → $163 | +11%/yr | Recovery + buybacks + tax cuts (2018) |
| 2020 | $163 → $140 | -14% | COVID recession |
| 2021 | $140 → $208 | +49% | Stimulus-fueled recovery; base effect |
| 2022-2024 | $208 → $240+ | +5%/yr | Normalisation; AI-driven tech earnings |
The long-term trend: S&P 500 EPS has grown at approximately 6-7% annually since 1950, compounding from $2.84 in 1960 to $240+ in 2024. This ~7% earnings growth plus a ~2% dividend yield equals the ~9-10% annualized total return of the S&P 500 over the long run.
Decomposing Equity Returns
Stock market returns have three components, and understanding which is driving performance is essential:
| Component | Definition | Typical Contribution | 2020-2021 | 2022 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EPS growth | Change in underlying earnings | 6-7%/yr (long-run avg) | +49% (recovery) | +5% |
| Dividend yield | Cash returned to shareholders | 1.5-2.0%/yr | 1.3% | 1.6% |
| Multiple change | Change in P/E ratio | 0%/yr (long-run) | +20% (expansion to 21x) | -25% (compression to 15x) |
The critical insight: multiple expansion is borrowed from the future. When the S&P 500 P/E expands from 17x to 22x, it boosts returns by ~30%, but the P/E cannot keep expanding indefinitely. At some point, multiples revert toward the long-run average, and future returns depend entirely on EPS growth. Investors who buy at 22x forward P/E are implicitly accepting lower forward returns than investors who buy at 15x.
The EPS Revision Cycle
Why Revisions Matter More Than Reported Numbers
The direction of analyst EPS estimate revisions is one of the most powerful short-term equity trading signals:
| Revision Pattern | Typical Stock Performance | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Estimates rising (3+ analysts raising) | Outperforms by 5-10% annualized | Business momentum is improving; estimates are still catching up |
| Estimates stable | In-line with market | No new information being priced |
| Estimates falling (3+ analysts cutting) | Underperforms by 5-10% annualized | Business deteriorating; estimates haven't fully adjusted |
| Large upward revision by top-ranked analyst | Immediate rally (1-3% typical) | High-credibility signal; institutions reposition |
The "Estimate Staircase" Pattern
Analyst revisions are inherently serial and conservative: an analyst who raises estimates once is statistically likely to raise them again, because the business momentum that caused the first revision typically continues. This creates a staircase of upward revisions over multiple quarters that the market prices in gradually, and the stock continues to outperform for 3-6 months after each revision.
Earnings Season: The Quarterly Event
Schedule and Structure
| Quarter | Reporting Period | Peak Season | Key Reporters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q4 | January-February | Mid-Jan to mid-Feb | Banks lead (JPM, GS, BAC), then tech |
| Q1 | April-May | Mid-Apr to mid-May | Same structure |
| Q2 | July-August | Mid-Jul to mid-Aug | Same structure |
| Q3 | October-November | Mid-Oct to mid-Nov | Same structure |
Beat Rate and Expectations
On average, approximately 75% of S&P 500 companies beat consensus EPS estimates each quarter. This high beat rate exists because: (1) companies sandbag guidance (setting low bars), (2) analysts calibrate estimates to be beatable, and (3) the "whisper" number (what the market really expects) is typically higher than the published consensus.
The market reaction depends not on whether a company beats, but by how much and what it says about the future:
| Outcome | Typical Market Reaction |
|---|---|
| Beat EPS + raise guidance | +3-10% (strongest positive) |
| Beat EPS + maintain guidance | +1-3% (modest positive) |
| Beat EPS + lower guidance | -2-8% (guidance overrides beat) |
| Miss EPS + maintain guidance | -3-8% |
| Miss EPS + lower guidance | -5-15% (worst case) |
GAAP vs Non-GAAP EPS
| Measure | Includes | Excludes | Best Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| GAAP EPS | All revenues and expenses per US accounting standards | Nothing, comprehensive | Regulatory filings; long-term analysis |
| Non-GAAP EPS | "Core" or "adjusted" operating earnings | SBC, restructuring, amortization, impairments | Peer comparison; trend analysis |
| Free Cash Flow per Share | Cash generated after capex | Non-cash charges entirely | True cash earnings power |
The GAAP-to-non-GAAP gap for the S&P 500 is approximately 15-25% and has been widening, particularly in the tech sector where stock-based compensation can represent 15-30% of operating expenses. Critics argue that non-GAAP has become "earnings without the bad stuff", a way to flatter results by excluding real economic costs.
EPS Across the Business Cycle
| Cycle Phase | EPS Growth Trend | Typical Sectors Leading | Investment Implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early recovery | Trough to strong growth (base effect) | Financials, Consumer Discretionary | Buy cyclicals; earnings revision momentum |
| Mid-cycle expansion | Steady 8-12% growth | Technology, Industrials | Broad equity exposure; rising tide |
| Late cycle | Decelerating; margin pressure | Energy, Healthcare | Rotate to quality; earnings growth scarce |
| Recession | Negative growth (-15 to -30% typical) | Utilities, Staples (defensive) | Avoid cyclicals; EPS estimates still too high |
The earnings recession signal: When S&P 500 EPS estimates for the next 12 months start declining (not just slowing growth, but actual declines in the estimate), the economy is approaching or entering a recession approximately 80% of the time. This signal led by 2-4 months in 2001, 2008, and 2020.
What to Watch
- S&P 500 forward EPS estimate, the single best real-time gauge of corporate America's earnings trajectory. Track weekly on FactSet or Yardeni Research.
- Estimate revision breadth, the percentage of S&P 500 companies with rising vs falling estimates. Above 50% = positive; below 40% = recession risk.
- GAAP vs non-GAAP gap, if the gap is widening for a company or sector, investigate what is being excluded and whether it is truly non-recurring.
- Earnings yield vs Treasury yield, S&P 500 earnings yield (1/P/E) minus 10Y Treasury yield. When this spread narrows below 1%, equities are "expensive" relative to bonds.
- Buyback-adjusted EPS growth, some companies grow EPS primarily through share count reduction rather than revenue growth. Separating organic EPS growth from buyback-driven EPS growth reveals true business momentum.
Frequently Asked Questions
▶What is the difference between basic and diluted EPS?
▶Why do stocks sometimes drop on an EPS beat?
▶How do EPS estimate revisions predict stock performance?
▶What is earnings season and how should traders position for it?
▶What is the difference between GAAP and non-GAAP (adjusted) EPS?
Earnings Per Share is one of the signals monitored daily in the AI-driven macro analysis on Convex Trading. The platform synthesises data across monetary policy, credit, sentiment, and on-chain metrics to generate actionable trade recommendations. Create a free account to build your own signal layer and see how Earnings Per Share is influencing current positions.
Macro briefings in your inbox
Daily analysis that explains which glossary signals are firing and why.