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I'm always skeptical of the financial reporting stuff because there's a LOT of motivation to have a "full slate" to show investors. It's kinda hard to completely fudge that stuff (there's some legal liability if it can be proved that you knowingly misled investors, at least in the US), but I'm still skeptical.
I will continue to try to curb my enthusiasm until there's a real date out there.
The simultaneous release news is good, regardless.
Is there any kind of incentive for them to actually not break what they say in financial forecasting from an investor perspective?
You'd think the answer would be an obvious yes but it gets broken so often I'm not sure
There's definitely a potential for a "boy who cried wolf" effect, where investors lose trust in what the company's stating due to it being inaccurate repeatedly. The big one is that (at least in the US) it's illegal to put out projections that you know to be inaccurate or skewed. However, that can be very, very difficult to prove, so it's rarely litigated.
I'm always skeptical of the financial reporting stuff because there's a LOT of motivation to have a "full slate" to show investors. It's kinda hard to completely fudge that stuff (there's some legal liability if it can be proved that you knowingly misled investors, at least in the US), but I'm still skeptical.
I will continue to try to curb my enthusiasm until there's a real date out there.
The simultaneous release news is good, regardless.
Is there any kind of incentive for them to actually not break what they say in financial forecasting from an investor perspective?
You'd think the answer would be an obvious yes but it gets broken so often I'm not sure
There's definitely a potential for a "boy who cried wolf" effect, where investors lose trust in what the company's stating due to it being inaccurate repeatedly. The big one is that (at least in the US) it's illegal to put out projections that you know to be inaccurate or skewed. However, that can be very, very difficult to prove, so it's rarely litigated.
Huh, thanks
I have basically no insight into how any business that isn't contracting is run so this was helpful
“He’ll take your money and count it (he’s an Adder…) and because he knows best he’ll even demonstrate the moves you just bought for you to replicate… if you can follow his jiggling.”
+1
AtomicTofuShe's a straight-up supervillain, yoRegistered Userregular
Posts
There's definitely a potential for a "boy who cried wolf" effect, where investors lose trust in what the company's stating due to it being inaccurate repeatedly. The big one is that (at least in the US) it's illegal to put out projections that you know to be inaccurate or skewed. However, that can be very, very difficult to prove, so it's rarely litigated.
Huh, thanks
I have basically no insight into how any business that isn't contracting is run so this was helpful
Does anyone know how konamis investors have reacted to their stuff lately?
I don't think that snake would be able to move very wel-
....
Trouser Snake, huh
fuck
Steam
Oh my god
oh my god
I don't think I've ever seen a character that was made entirely out of pun before.
Salute them during the entire trip.
Realm excited to see who/what their mumbo jumbo standin is