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A Market Full of Bull? In the immortal words of Jack Nicholson in Easy Rider , “It’s hard to be free when you’re bought and sold in the marketplace.” That statement applies to Wall Street securities analysts, who certainly are not free to openly voice their opinions about companies tha they follow because they are employed by fi rms that earn millions of dollars in fees from these same companies. To appreciate the predicament of the pied pipers of Wal Street, consider the case of Biovail Corp. and drug industry securities analyst, Heman K. Shah....
The Pied Pipers of Wall Street How Analysts Sell You Down the River by Benjamin Mark Cole Bloomberg Press © 2001 234 pages Focus Take-Aways Leadership • Generally speaking, stock analysts aren’t objective. Strategy Sales & Marketing • The days when analysts’ first duty was to the retail investor are long gone. Corporate Finance • Analysts have become media darlings who hype stocks. Human Resources • Investment banks, which employ analysts, earn millions of dollars in fees from the Technology companies that analysts recommend. Production & Logistics • As a result, analysts are beholden to institutional interests. Small Business Economics & Politics • Many brokerages take equity positions in the companies they tout. Industries & Regions • The influence of financial news shows has increased analysts’ power. Career Development • Of the 33,169 stock recommendations made by brokerage analysts in 1999, only Personal Finance 125 were sells. Self Improvement Ideas & Trends • Analysts typically leak their recommendations to institutional clients before releas- ing the news to the public. • Some experts suggest requiring “oral disclosures” for financial news shows stating that analyst advice may not be objective. • With a few exceptions, analysts face no consequences from the SEC. Rating (10 is best) Overall Applicability Innovation Style 9 8 9 9 Visit our website at www.getAbstract.com to purchase individual abstracts, personal subscriptions or corporate solutions. getAbstract is an Internet based knowledge rating service and publisher of book abstracts. Every week, subscribers are e-mailed a short abstract of a different business book. Each abstract contains an overview of essential ideas from the entire book. Excerpts from this book are reprinted here with the permission of the publisher. The respective copyrights of authors and publishers are acknowledged. All rights reserved. No part of this abstract may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, photocopying, or otherwise, without prior written permission of getAbstract Ltd (Switzerland). Review The best proof of Benjamin Mark Cole’s premise — that brokerage houses have sold out common investors to curry favor with huge corporate interests — is the ease with which he accumulates examples of analysts hyping stocks that later went bust. Can the combi- nation of self-interest, analyst hype, and subsequent stock price implosion somehow be coincidental? Or is it time to start calling a duck a duck (or, for that matter, a quack a quack)? Cole’s indictment of Wall Street’s most efficient salesmen comes just in time for investors looking for a culprit in the overnight evaporation of billions of dollars in retire- ment funds. Of course, analysts can’t be blamed for the stock-market downturn, but their behavior during the run up deserves the close scrutiny it receives here. getAbstract.com recommends this book to any investor who suspects that the true talent of the talking heads they see on CNBC might really be turning your money into theirs. Abstract A Market Full of Bull? In the immortal words of Jack Nicholson in Easy Rider, “It’s hard to be free when you’re bought and sold in the marketplace.” That statement applies to Wall Street securities analysts, who certainly are not free to openly voice their opinions about companies that they follow because they are employed by firms that earn millions of dollars in fees “Even at an old- from these same companies. To appreciate the predicament of the pied pipers of Wall line firm like A.G. Edwards, it’s the Street, consider the case of Biovail Corp. and drug industry securities analyst, Hemant investment bank- K. Shah. ers who are in the driver’s seat, The Shah Runs Into Trouble while the stockbro- kers — the old In the early 1990s, Hemant K. Shah was widely sought after for his expertise in phar- customers’ men — maceutical companies. A whisper from Shah could move mountains of cash. So when a are merely along young biotech firm named Biovail needed capital, it turned to Shah. for the ride.” In two years, Shah raised about $15 million for the company through private equity financing deals. At the same time he was raising the money for Biovail, Shah was touting the company’s stock to the money managers who regularly relied on him for advice. In 1995, Shah’s involvement went a step further. He signed a contract with Biovail to negotiate a licensing agreement with Hoechst-Roussel for Tiazac, Biovail’s premier “Wall Street drug for controlling blood pressure. But when Biovail cut a deal with another company doesn’t like a nay- instead, Shah felt cut out. He began to complain publicly that he had not been paid by sayer, and if nay- sayers are ever Biovail for his work. In October of 1995, he recommended to his clients that they sell wrong, they are Biovail — an embarrassing move because it came just in advance of a big run up in the ‘pasteurized’ (sent company’s share price. out to pasture).” Shah’s response was to begin a whisper campaign suggesting that something was wrong with the Tiazac product. He falsely stated that an FDA statistical study suggested the drug was associated with heart attacks. At the same time he tried to bad-mouth the stock, Shah was buying short, betting more than $200,000 that the stock value would plummet. In late January it did just that, drop- ping $5 per share to $21. But after a favorable FDA report, the stock market began to The Pied Pipers of Wall Street © Copyright 2001 getAbstract 2 of 5 rise, and Shah’s gamble on his own ability to talk the stock down appeared likely to fail. When legendary investor George Soros gave the stock his imprimatur by buying 20% of it in 1996, Shah was in trouble. “At times, one wonders what it Shah then began to claim in conversations with investors that Soros was actually his would take to client, and was manipulating the price of the stock in order to short it later. Shah’s dim prompt SEC action against an analyst view of Biovail’s prospects was quoted on CNBC, Dow Jones, and Bloomberg News, at a major broker- none of whom seemed aware that the analyst was bitter over his falling out with Biovail, age.” and had a substantial personal investment at stake. What was the upshot of Shah’s self-interested involvement? Although Shah was called to testify in a civil trial, he continues to be widely cited as an observer of the pharmaceuti- “Even before a cal industry. Biovail largely shook off the effects of the rumors that circulated around it. ‘buy’ recommen- But the small investors hurt along the way have never been counted. dation hits the wires, the mutual The Customers’ Men funds have typi- cally been tipped Stockbrokers were once known as customers’ men, which meant that their first job was off to the pending to take care of the investors, or customers, who entrusted them with their money. As tout, and they competition squeezed fees however, the pressure to discount transaction costs enticed often assemble the brokerage houses to expand into new profit centers: issuing stocks and bonds, and blocks of stock in front of the recom- financing real estate limited partnerships, where fees might range from 15% to 20% of mendation.” the market value. Investment banking emerged to replace stock transactions as a major profit center for the big brokerages. In the entire decade of the 1960s, brokerages underwrote about $100 bil- “It is one of the lion of stocks and bonds. In the 1990s, the brokerage industry underwrote between $700 great modern iro- billion and $2.23 trillion each year. nies of Wall Street: Just as analysts It’s little wonder that analysts worry that their real clients — corporations, investment toss down the bankers and mammoth mutual fund clients — will have them drawn and quartered if green eyeshades they issue a negative report. After all, brokerage houses collect fees of between 7% and and pick up the flutes to accom- 9% of total underwriting volume. Moreover, brokerages have begun taking a pre-IPO pany their invest- equity position in companies prior to an initial underwriting, further committing them ment banking to a given company’s fortunes. departments, they also become more In addition to the influence and potential conflict of interest created by investment bank- celebrated, more ing activity and equity positions, there are other concerns. Brokerage investment bank- widely quoted, much more highly ers are collecting fees for arranging mergers and acquisitions, which have exploded in paid.” frequency and size. Indeed, today many analysts focus on touting stocks to help bring investment banking business to their firm — and earning hundreds of thousands of dol- lars in bonuses in the process. For today’s analysts, it is more important to be articulate manipulators of the media than expert analysts of financial data. “Clearly, retail investors are no The $6 Billion Dollar Man longer the major underwriting bro- If you want to understand the power of today’s stock touts, consider the case of Henry kerage firms’ most Blodget of Merrill Lynch. You might be interested to learn that this influential analyst important custom- was a history major at Yale. After a few months as a reporter for CNN Business News, ers. That distinc- he signed onto the corporate-finance training program at Prudential Securities in 1994, a tion is now held by corporate clients.” program for up-and-coming investment bankers. In 1996 he joined CIBC Oppenheimer as an analyst, where he became a regular on the financial television talk shows. On December 16, 1998, with Oppenheimer’s small army of stock brokers listening in on his “morning call,” he stunned colleagues with his prediction that Amazon.com stock The Pied Pipers of Wall Street © Copyright 2001 getAbstract 3 of 5 would trade at more than $400 per share within the year. By the closing bell that day, the company stock jumped from $243 per share to $301.75. The jump in valuation of 25% in one day generated some $6.6 billion of new market capitalization for the company, which had never earned a profit — all of this on the basis of a recommendation from an analyst “Of course, this puts the analyst who was not an accountant or even an MBA. in something of a bind. What if his The Dreman Study or her analysis reveals that the Why isn’t anyone exploring the apparent conflict of interest that influences the buying company being decision of the investing public? Wall Street financial columnist David Dreman con- herded to an IPO ducted the largest review of analyst performance ever undertaken, with the assistance of isn’t as great as James Madison University Professor of Business Michael Berry. The authors found that everyone wants to believe?” the typical analyst’s forecast of corporate earnings was off by 42%. But of greater concern was the direction of the error. Earnings were overestimated three times for every instance where they were underestimated. This is despite the constant efforts by most companies to get analysts to slightly underestimate earnings estimates. In other words, left to their own devices, the analysts would probably be even more “Analysts, in other words, must for- wildly bullish. When it comes to picking stocks one year in advance, analysts underper- ever entrance the formed the market 75% of the time. buying public with lyrical tales of One explanation for this poor record: Analysts typically leak word of an upcoming “buy” higher and then recommendation to their trading departments and large institutional clients. This will higher share cause a bulge in the stock price leading up to the date when the recommendation is made prices ahead and the resulting easy, public. So by the time the “buy” order is actually released, the stock is actually already fat capital gains.” somewhat overpriced. Moreover, of the 33,169 stock recommendations made by broker- age analysts in 1999, only 125 were pure sells. This greedy rush for riches have led to some classic Wall Street meltdowns, including the likes of Planet Hollywood, Pets.com and eToys.com. “The sort of Playing the Pump-and-Dump carnival barkers one finds outside If respected analysts have been compromised, what can investors expect from the sec- chintzier Vegas ond- and third-tier firms that underwrite small-cap or microcap companies? Generally, casinos come to these companies lack the polish and the compliance departments of the larger firms. mind.” One of the games these firms play is to talk up the value of a small-cap firm that is ignored by the mainstream financial institutions, and then dump the stock before the value reality hits home. This is the familiar pump-and-dump strategy. Another factor in stock market hype is the use of financial PR firms to promote recognition of a small-cap “The pump-and- stock. Some of these firms are compensated in stock rather than fees — setting in motion dump — the hyping of a stock a drive to push the stock’s value regardless of a company’s true prospects. Here are some by brokerages and other stock manipulation schemes, as reported by Barron’s: the institutional investors, so that • Parking. An accomplice buys a particular stock on behalf of someone else and retail customers “parks” it until it’s time to sell. The identity of the true manipulator is thereby will buy it, letting hidden. insiders and big traders get out — • False Accounts. These brokerage accounts are controlled by someone other than the is not limited only person named. to initial public offerings.” • Matching Orders. Brokerages agree to trade stock with each other, buying back and forth and running the price up, often passing the same shares to each other. This is often done in coordination with a news report or positive financial data. The steadily rising price makes the stock more attractive to retail investors. The Pied Pipers of Wall Street © Copyright 2001 getAbstract 4 of 5 Surviving the Hype How do you avoid being manipulated? Well, there are a few independent analysts who do not have financial axes to grind. These are the good guys, whose advice you may want “But, of course, the basics of stock to seek: manipulation are • Analyst Howard M. Schilit (exclusive and expensive) usually simple: Get a lot of stock- • The Red Chip Review brokers at regional • Hulbert’s Financial Digest (which rates the performance of newsletters) firms to start hyping the target • Value Line Investment Survey stock to their cli- ents. The buying • Burkenroad Reports pressure pushes • Standard & Poors the stock up. The stockbrokers don’t • iExchange.com (to get advice on specific stock picks) let the clients sell until insiders have SEC intervention? sold out.” No less an authority than SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt has stated, “I worry that investors are being influenced too much by analysts whose evaluations read like they graduated from the Lake Woebegon School of Securities Analysis — the one that boasts that all its securities are above average.” Is regulation looming? “It’s considered bad form for an Today, other than a few basic rules on communication, analysts can say whatever they employee of a major brokerage to wish, including tipping off their best clients about an upcoming “buy” recommenda- indulge in short tion. And no one has easy answers about how to regulate relations between analysts and trading, much less investment bankers. One idea is to have “an oral disclosure” on financial news shows, to boast about it stating that the analysts quoted might have conflicts of interest. Whether that would openly.” outweigh the power of leading financial organizations, who have a proven interest in expanding their ability to manipulate the market value of shares, remains to be seen. And the chance that the U. S. Congress will legislate a split between the underwriting and retail arms of brokerages is remote at best. About The Author Benjamin Mark Cole helped launch the daily financial paper Investor’s Daily (now Inves- tor’s Business Daily). For 20 years, he has been a leading financial reporter, writing for U.S. News & World Report, The Los Angeles Herald Examiner, and the Los Angeles Business Journal. He currently writes the “Wall Street West” column in the Los Angeles Business Journal. Buzz-Words Small-cap / Microcap / Selling short / Underwriting / Customers’ men / Pump-and- dump / Matching orders / False accounts The Pied Pipers of Wall Street © Copyright 2001 getAbstract 5 of 5
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