The Walt Disney Company (DIS), Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (GS): Is It Good for Management to Lower Investor Expectations?

Two weeks ago, The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS) Chief Financial Officer Jay Rasulo told a group of analysts at the Nomura Global Media & Telecom Summit that The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS)’s operating income, cable network affiliate fees, and parks revenue could suffer in the fiscal third quarter. The stock ended that week lower by 3.68% after falling 2.69% on May 30, the day the comments were made.

The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS)A Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (NYSE:GS) analyst quickly released a report indicating that the market overreacted to the comments, the quarter wouldn’t turn out to be as bad as the company made it sound, and Rasulo’s comments were primarily reiterations of prior comments.

Well, if Rasulo was just repeating what the company had previously said, then the stock decline was an overreaction and shouldn’t have happened. But the question I have is why management makes these sorts of comments at all.

The most likely reason is to appease Wall Street. Talking to analysts also may make some management teams feel important or help them fulfill some sort of ego-driven need. Now, I’m not saying that’s the case with The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS), but in my opinion, these sorts of comments aren’t helping anyone, and I’d prefer management teams to just stop talking until their quarterly results have been released and we know the actual numbers.

Year to date, shares of The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS) are up 30.25%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (INDEXDJX:.DJI) is up only 16.36%. Only four of the other 30 components that make up the Dow Jones Industrial Average (INDEXDJX:.DJI) have performed better in 2013. Investors clearly think the company is performing well, and shares rose 2.80% this past week, gaining back nearly all the downside the stock realized after the comments were made.

So will shares not fall when earnings come out, because investors knew about the possible poor performance? We’ve seen this time and time again: A company releases a statement days or weeks before an earnings release, and shares fall that day and again after the results are published. Investors have a terrible long-term memory. The case with The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS) is a perfect example. The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (NYSE:GS) analyst said the company had previously told us of most of these issues, yet shares fell when we heard them again. Shares will tank if quarterly results come out and miss big time, even though we’ve been told not once, but twice, that they would be weak.

So if shares fall when the possible miss is announced well in advance, and then shares will probably fall again later when the actual quarterly results miss, then why make the announcement at all?

Please shares your thoughts below and help me understand this reasoning.

The article Is It Good for Management to Lower Investor Expectations? originally appeared on Fool.com is written by Matt Thalman.

Fool contributor Matt Thalman owns shares of Walt Disney. Check back Monday through Friday as Matt explains what caused the Dow’s winners and losers of the day, and every Saturday for a weekly recap. Follow Matt on Twitter @mthalman5513. The Motley Fool recommends Goldman Sachs and Walt Disney and owns shares of Walt Disney.

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