In An Era Of Constant Investment Pressure, Quarterly Reports Aren’t The Problem

As investor influence expands beyond earnings season, companies need better ways to control their narrative.
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Calls to end quarterly earnings reports argue that the change would help companies focus on long-term goals rather than short-term priorities.

Yet the focus on short-termism isn’t from reporting requirements; it comes from investors and analysts who monitor company performance in real time, using continuous data, private engagement and proxy influence to shape decisions long before results are released. With or without quarterly reports, companies need to focus on establishing and maintaining a compelling value narrative, a total equity story based on market positioning, a value creation plan and management accountability if they want to escape the short-term trap.

For most executives, quarterly reports still serve a purpose. They provide structure, a defined moment to explain performance, clarify strategy and manage expectations in a market that never stops watching. Ending that process might free up company resources, but it would take away one of the few tools executives have to manage investor pressure.

It’s not that the current system is efficient: preparing quarterly reports consumes extraordinary time and resources, something Fortune 500 leaders have criticized. Reporting begins barely six weeks into each new quarter and stretches almost to the next one, consuming entire teams for months at a time.

Instead of thinking ahead about strategy, planning, risk modeling and the kind of proactive financial analysis that actually builds long-term value, finance teams are spending almost all their time looking backwards. When constantly preparing to report what’s already happened, there’s less bandwidth to analyze what could happen—or to identify the vulnerabilities that activists are already calculating.

Europe’s “natural experiment,” where public companies are split between quarterly and semiannual reporting, provides a real-world reference point for the impact of reporting frequency. As it turns out, companies that report quarterly and those that report semiannually show no material difference in valuation or long-term performance. Even in sectors that dominate earnings season, firms that reduce reporting frequency don’t see a lift in multiples, and many still choose quarterly reporting because it drives investor attention and liquidity.

In fact, the bigger challenge companies face today is the constant pressure from investors, proxy firms and activists that exists independently from regular reporting cycles and cadences. Institutional investors meet privately with management throughout the year, gaining insights that often influence trading and engagement strategies in ways that no public report can match. These private meetings create information advantages that drive portfolio adjustments within days or weeks, completely independent of any public filing schedule.

The handful of proxy advisory firms that dominate the market can swing shareholder votes by double-digit margins on critical matters. As a result, companies are treating these firms as quasi-regulators, testing major decisions against their policies before finalizing them. Leadership spends months anticipating these recommendations and tailoring governance changes to align with their continuously evolving standards—not quarterly.

Activist campaigns are untethered from reporting calendars, running on their own data and their own timelines. For example, recent activist campaigns in transportation and retail were launched within weeks of stakeholder announcements, with leadership changes following within less than two months. Quarterly disclosures aren’t driving these campaigns. Instead, it’s a year-round analysis of trapped value. Activists identify targets by comparing companies against peers across multiple dimensions, including share price performance, margins and capital allocation efficiency.

Consider that the typical company facing an activist campaign has underperformed the market by more than 10 percent in the year leading up to the announcement. Patterns such as declining margins relative to competitors, underutilized assets or strategic drift that suggests management isn’t maximizing value can signal an opportunity. That work happens constantly, using real-time data and proprietary models, rather than waiting for filings. So as long as companies provide regular financial data on any consistent basis, activists can identify vulnerabilities and build their cases.

These companies also treat investor relations as a strategic, continuous discipline, one that builds credibility before issues arise and engages shareholders year-round, not just during proxy season or earnings calls. Investors don’t necessarily want more frequent reporting; they want clarity, context and consistency. A clear statement of value in a well-timed op-ed or media appearance can do more for a company’s investor confidence than a single report and helps companies avoid some of the speculation that can erode value.

Quarterly reports can be part of continuous investor relations, offering leaders the opportunity to frame results, provide forward-looking context, and reinforce confidence in their vision. In an era when as much as 20 percent of stock price movement can stem from tone and messaging—not just financials—the ability to tell that story directly to the market is critical. In practice, that might mean merging the annual report and first-quarter update into a single semi annual filing or trimming formal cycles while maintaining detailed performance updates through digital investor portals. Simplifying the process could free up time for deeper strategic work—risk modeling, scenario planning and shareholder engagement—while preserving the communication cadence investors rely on.

By treating investor engagement as a strategic function, executives can refocus on the total equity story and communicate long-term value creation, rather than constantly react to short-term pressures. Executives will be differentiated when they can strike a balance between competing pressures and requirements, while still maintaining a strong, clear and concise company narrative.

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