This study examines how institutional investors allocate trading across the earnings announcement cycle and whether industry trading concentration strengthens that activity. The analysis is motivated by two complementary ideas: public disclosures can increase the value of investors’ prior information, and even sophisticated investors face costly information processing. These perspectives imply that institutional trading need not be concentrated only before disclosure and may be strongest after earnings announcements, when investors combine newly released public information with prior firm- and industry-specific signals. Using daily institutional trading data from Ancerno, we find that institutional net trading is positively related to earnings surprises before, during, and after earnings announcements, with the strongest relation occurring in the post-announcement period. We also document a clear asymmetry: trading is strongly related to positive earnings surprises across all three stages, whereas trading related to negative earnings surprises is concentrated mainly after disclosure. In addition, industry trading concentration strengthens the relation between institutional trading and earnings news across the announcement cycle, especially for positive surprises. These findings provide an integrated view of institutional information processing around a major recurring disclosure event, show that the timing of institutional trading is informative about how earnings news is incorporated into prices, and support the view that industry specialization is linked to stronger earnings-related trading.
Keskek et al. (Sun,) studied this question.