Earnings
How can I get notified when a company reports earnings?
Receive push notifications for company earnings releases, calls, and transcripts without repeatedly checking an earnings calendar.
Published
Earnings are a sequence, not a single timestamp
Investors often talk about an earnings alert as though it were one event. In practice, a company may announce a date, publish a release, file supporting material, host a conference call, and make a transcript available at different times. Decide which of those moments matters to you.
If your goal is to see the reported numbers, the release notification is central. If you follow management commentary, the call matters. If you prefer reading rather than listening live, transcript availability may be the most useful trigger. Stocklet supports these earnings-related categories so you can build a workflow around how you actually research.
Why calendar reminders are not enough
A calendar can remind you that an event is expected, but expected dates can change and publication does not always occur at the exact reminder time. A calendar also cannot tell you that the document is now available unless it is connected to a live source.
Email lists are helpful but can be delayed by inbox rules or buried among other messages. Manually checking investor-relations pages is accurate but does not scale across a watchlist. Push notifications fill the attention gap: they direct you back when a supported public event is detected.
Configure earnings alerts in Stocklet
- Download Stocklet and allow push notifications.
- Search for the company or ticker.
- Open the stock's alert settings.
- Enable the earnings event categories you want to follow.
- Save the settings and repeat for other watchlist companies.
You can then close the app. Stocklet monitors supported earnings events and notifies you after information becomes publicly available and is processed. Internet connectivity, source timing, and device settings can affect delivery, so do not use a push notification as the only control for a time-critical obligation.
What to review after an earnings release
Start with the source document. Identify the reporting period and compare results with the company's own prior guidance and previous periods. Revenue and earnings-per-share headlines are only part of the picture. Cash flow, margins, segment performance, balance-sheet changes, and updated outlook can materially affect the interpretation.
Separate company-reported metrics from adjusted measures and external expectations. If a summary says the company "beat" or "missed," ask which estimate and which metric it refers to. Read reconciliations for non-GAAP measures rather than assuming every adjusted number is directly comparable.
Then review management commentary. The call may explain demand, costs, capital allocation, risks, and guidance. A transcript is useful for searching exact topics, but check the company recording or official materials when wording is important.
Connect earnings with other alert types
Earnings can coincide with large price movements, press releases, analyst rating changes, and breaking news. Rather than trying to infer the whole story from one notification, use each alert as a pointer to a different part of the event.
A price alert tells you that the market moved. An earnings alert tells you that results or related materials are available. An analyst alert may show how an external firm changed its view. These are separate facts, and none alone determines what an investor should do.
Keep a focused earnings watchlist
Enable alerts for companies you own, actively research, or need to monitor. Following every company can make reporting season overwhelming. If a stock leaves your research list, remove its event notifications.
It also helps to write a short pre-earnings checklist: which metrics matter, what guidance was previously issued, and which questions remain unresolved. When the notification arrives, compare the release with that checklist instead of reacting only to the stock's first move.
Use Stocklet for attention, primary sources for decisions
Stocklet makes earnings monitoring practical by delivering supported events to your phone. The company's investor-relations site and regulatory filings remain the authoritative sources for the actual results. Combining fast discovery with careful source review creates a more reliable workflow than either constant manual checking or headline-only reactions.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers about earnings and using Stocklet.
Can I get an alert when an earnings release is published?
Yes. Enable earnings alerts for the company in Stocklet to receive supported release notifications after publication and processing.
Does Stocklet notify me about earnings calls?
Stocklet's earnings workflow supports notifications for earnings releases, conference calls, and transcript availability.
Can an earnings date change?
Yes. Companies may confirm, update, or reschedule events. Verify the latest date and time with the company's investor-relations page.
Will an earnings alert tell me whether results are good?
No. It tells you that an event or document is available. Evaluating the results requires reviewing the release, guidance, call, and context.
Stocklet provides informational notifications, not investment advice. Alert timing depends on when source information becomes publicly available and is processed.