This page reflects APPF options positioning from the latest published market-close snapshot. Intraday price and contract changes are not displayed.
Published Snapshot
May 20, 2026 close
Earnings Move History — APPF
Historical stock price reactions to earnings announcements
Event-driven behavior view with EPS surprise context and post-event move distribution.
Avg Move
+1.7%
Beat Rate
60%
Avg Surprise
+3.0%
Events
7
Report Context
Supporting confidence and setup preview
Top Setup Preview
Open the earnings report to see the highest-conviction setup for this cycle.
Bias and setup details are synthesized from the earnings persona model.
Confidence
—
Earnings Storyline
Quick read on expected pricing, realized reaction, and directional behavior
Implied vs Realized Gap
-5.4%
Nearest implied move is 5.2% vs historical average realized move of 10.6%.
IV Crush Tendency (Proxy)
86%
Historical events finishing inside the nearest implied move.
Options currently price richer than typical realized earnings moves.
Post-Earnings Directional Bias
Downside Bias
Up 3 / Down 4 (57% dominant)
Average signed move: -9.6%
Earnings Reaction Distribution
Normalized percentage move on each reported event
Stock Move % on Earnings
Earnings Event Log
Detailed results for each reported quarter
Date
Time
EPS Est
EPS Act
Surprise
Stock Move
Beat?
Apr 30, 2026
—
$1.47
—
—
+1.1%
—
Apr 23, 2026
—
$1.69
—
—
-3.9%
—
Mar 31, 2026
—
$1.47
$1.61
+9.18%
+1.2%
Yes
Dec 31, 2025
—
$1.25
$1.39
+10.81%
-1.3%
Yes
Sep 30, 2025
—
$1.45
$1.31
-9.80%
-2.5%
No
Jun 30, 2025
—
$1.28
$1.39
+8.35%
+1.3%
Yes
Mar 31, 2025
—
$1.22
$1.21
-1.17%
-63.0%
No
How to Read Earnings History
Use historical post-earnings behavior to frame the next event, not to assume the next quarter will repeat the last one.
What this page tells you
It shows how the stock has reacted to past earnings, including surprise history, average move size, and whether upside or downside reactions have tended to dominate.
How traders use it
Compare historical realized moves with the next implied move to judge whether options are pricing too much, too little, or roughly enough event risk.
What matters most
Recent quarters, current guidance, and current IV usually matter more than distant history, especially when the business or macro regime has changed.
Historical earnings behavior is best used to prepare for the next event before you choose a structure and size the risk.