Friday nights aren't just for high school football in Texas...
It's when public companies often wait to file bad news with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"), which they hope will go unnoticed since by the time the news drops everybody on Wall Street has gone home.
They've been doing it for years... no, make that decades. I'm stunned it's still a thing, since thanks to the Internet, social media, and millions of eyeballs focused everywhere, little goes undetected these days.
But it is still a thing, so much so that my friend Michelle Leder has dubbed it the "Friday Night Dump."
The Friday Night Dump is something she has been rummaging through for as long as I've known her, which is a very long time.
Michelle is an SEC filings sleuth...
She founded the website www.footnoted.org and also writes a column for Bloomberg Opinion.
She's the queen at finding nuggets that companies, their lawyers, and PR folks still hope nobody will see.
After all, why in the world would companies still wait until late Friday to file bad news?
Michelle has no idea, telling me her best guess:
It's just habit. It's just the way they've always done it and the way they'll always do it.
And, boy, do they! But it's not just on Fridays...
For all types of news, including earnings, management changes, and other items, companies file something known as an 8-K.
A general rule of thumb I've noticed: If it's filed in the morning, it's usually good news. If it's filed after the close, it's likely bad news. The SEC is open for filings from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Eastern, but 5:30 p.m. is the cutoff to be posted to the SEC's website that day.
As Michelle points out, on any day, more 8-Ks are filed in the 90 minutes before the SEC's formal close than during the business day...
So are, surprisingly, annual and quarterly filings – 10-Ks and 10-Qs.
The artificial intelligence research firm Bedrock AI, which specializes in using AI to spot trouble in SEC filings, recently wrote...
It's no secret that companies take timing into consideration when they publish a securities filing. The vast majority of 10-Ks and 10-Qs (~60%) are filed between 4 PM and 5:30 PM, after markets close but while EDGAR is still accepting filings. This gives stakeholders time to read and digest the information before markets open the next day.
If that's not obvious enough, this chart from Bedrock of filing times of 10-Ks and 10-Qs should be...