TITLE:
Why Earnings Surprises Move Stocks So Sharply: Insights from the Potential Payback Period (PPP) or “Dynamic P/E Ratio”
AUTHORS:
Rainsy Sam
KEYWORDS:
Potential Payback Period (PPP), Stock Internal Rate of Return (SIRR), Dynamic P/E, Earnings Surprises, Amplification Effect, Stock Valuation
JOURNAL NAME:
Journal of Mathematical Finance,
Vol.15 No.4,
November
3,
2025
ABSTRACT: Equity markets often react disproportionately to quarterly earnings surprises. Small deviations from analyst expectations—sometimes just a few cents per share—can trigger sharp stock price movements. Traditional valuation tools such as the Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio, the Price/Earnings-to-Growth (PEG) ratio, and discounted cash flow (DCF) models fail to rationally explain this amplification effect. This article introduces the Potential Payback Period (PPP), conceived as the “Dynamic P/E ratio”, a framework that embeds both earnings growth (g) and discount rates (r) into valuation. Because the PPP uses a logarithmic structure to reflect compounding effects, even minor revisions to earnings growth expectations extend over a multi-year horizon, producing amplified and measurable valuation shifts. By translating PPP into the Stock Internal Rate of Return (SIRR), the framework further connects earnings surprises to shifts in implied returns, explaining why markets react so sharply to seemingly small revisions.