Why Effective Earnings Calls Must Deliver Information and a Credible Story

Every leadership decision and message affects your market valuation, because everything communicates. Nowhere is that clearer than in how a single earnings call can move your price/earnings multiple when results do or do not match your story.

The basic value equation for leaders

Marketers have long understood that perceived relative value is a function of perceived relative benefits and relative perceived costs. When people see more benefit for the same or lower cost versus your competitors, value goes up; when they see less benefit or higher cost, value goes down. Investors apply the same lens to companies. 

In capital markets, that basic value equation shows up in your P/E ratio: price divided by expected future earnings. Two major components drive that. One is the level of expected future earnings themselves. The other is the market’s confidence that you will deliver those earnings, both in the absolute and relative to other investment options. Taking down guidance, missing projections, and eroding credibility affect both sides of that equation. 

Meta: when strategy talk compresses the multiple

Meta’s Q3 2022 earnings were a vivid example of how communication can drive multiple compression, not just a single-quarter move in earnings. The company missed EPS expectations, showed a year-over-year revenue decline, and flagged sharply higher expenses and headcount. But the real damage came on the call, where management doubled down on large, open-ended metaverse and infrastructure investments with little detail on milestones, time frames, or risk management.

Investors who came looking for discipline and a clear capital allocation story instead heard “more spend, more time, more uncertainty.” The stock dropped roughly a quarter in a day, wiping out tens of billions of market value and pushing the trailing P/E from the mid-teens toward the low-teens. The subsequent rebound, once Meta pivoted to “efficiency” with layoffs and tighter expense guidance, underlined that the earlier discount was as much about confidence and credibility as about the quarter’s numbers.

DraftKings: guidance that undercut its own story

DraftKings offers a similar example of how guidance and the narrative around it can undermine perceived value. In early 2026, the company issued 2026 revenue guidance of 6.5–6.9 billion dollars, roughly 600 million dollars below the Street’s expectation of about 7.3 billion. The number alone was disappointing, but the bigger problem was how the company explained it. 

CEO Jason Robins characterized the guidance as “conservative,” yet also revealed that the costs of a major new prediction‑markets initiative were fully baked into the outlook while none of the potential revenue upside from that initiative was included. That asymmetry – costs now, upside later and off the page – made investors feel they were being asked to accept lower near‑term earnings and higher risk without a clear, quantifiable benefit story. Analysts described it as a “self‑inflicted wound” and reframed the stock as a “show‑me” name, with greater skepticism around the company’s projections and capital allocation. 

Here again, the basic value equation showed through. On the benefits side, investors now saw a lower near‑term revenue trajectory and more uncertainty about long‑term monetization. On the cost side, they saw incremental investment and execution risk. The logical outcome was pressure on both the stock price and the multiple investors were willing to pay for future earnings.

The leadership mandate: deliver and communicate credibly

The lesson for leaders is not to stop investing or to manage the stock tick by tick. The lesson is that the market is constantly updating its assessment of your perceived relative benefits, perceived relative costs, and credibility. Guidance cuts, missed projections, and strategic pivots are sometimes necessary. How you handle them determines whether investors mark down only the numbers or also your multiple.

Practically, that means two things. First, do what you say you’re going to do. Every earnings call, guidance range, and strategic commitment is a promise; consistent delivery is the single most powerful driver of confidence in future earnings. Second, tell the story of why people should believe your future projections in a way that is specific, grounded, and testable.

Frame investments with clear milestones, realistic time horizons, and an honest discussion of risks and trade‑offs. Connect spending to value in the same way you would for a customer proposition, explicitly linking expected benefits and costs. In public markets as in product markets, everything communicates – and over time, your P/E multiple will reflect whether investors believe your story enough to pay up for the earnings you say are coming.

 

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