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Security Analysts and Conflicts of Interest

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Security Analysts and Conflicts of Interest Jay R. Ritter Cordell Professor of Finance University of Florida Security analysts who work for brokerage firms that do ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Security Analysts and Conflicts of Interest


1
Security Analysts and Conflicts of Interest
  • Jay R. Ritter
  • Cordell Professor of Finance
  • University of Florida

2
Security analysts who work for brokerage firms
that do investment banking, trade stocks
(brokerage), and provide research on these stocks
are known as sell-side analystsI will focus
exclusively on equity analysts
3
What do security analysts do?
  • Public pronouncements
  • Buy/sell recommendations
  • Target prices
  • Earnings forecasts
  • Written reports

4
What do security analysts do?
  • Private (telephone calls)
  • Summarizing information
  • Passing along private (inside) information

5
  • Sell-side security analysts are like professors
  • We dont make money by selling our research
    papers to PBFJ and other journals
  • We get paid indirectly through a higher salary if
    we publish influential research papers

6
  • Security analysts are paid indirectly if they
    attract
  • - investment banking deals
  • - trading commissions that include soft dollars
  • Soft dollars are investor commissions paid for
    services in excess of pure trade execution.

7
Conflicts of interest
  • Need to get information from management
  • Need to appease investors long in stock
  • Need to attract banking mandates

8
What do practitioners think?
  • If an analyst is negative on you, you are not
    going to hand their bank a significant role in
    your stock issuance, thats for sure. That person
    becomes the mouthpiece to the investment
    community for your firm.
  • Amylin Pharmaceuticals CFO Mark Foletta,
  • as quoted in Investment Dealers Digest.

9
These conflicts create an incentive to issue
optimistic recommendationsDuring the TMT (Tech,
Media, and Telecom) bubble of the late 1990s,
these conflicts of interest became severe
10
Where were the regulators?
11
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12
  • Recent years have seen major changes
  • The commissions per share paid by
    institutional investors in the US have collapsed
    in the last seven years from an average of about
    4.5 cents per share to about 1.5 cents per share
  • This is a weighted average of ECNs, crossing
    networks, and full-service brokers

13
Proportion of buy, hold, and sell recommendations
from U.S. sell-side analysts, 2000-2004.
Source Reuters Estimates
14
The Financial Services Authority (FSA) in the UK
has encouraged unbundling
15
The salaries of sell-side analysts have been
fallingMany sell-side analysts have moved to
the buy-sideIn Europe and North America, junior
analyst jobs have been outsourced to IndiaMore
research is being offered on Asian stocks
16
What are the most important qualities of a good
analyst?
  • a) Accurate earnings forecasts
  • b) Timely buy and sell recommendations
  • c) Insightful written reports
  • d) Setting up meetings with management
  • e) Accessibility/responsiveness of phone calls
  • f) Industry knowledge

17
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18
Private value of information
  • Investors are willing to pay for information only
    when it is valuable
  • Value can be measured as the ability to generate
    positive abnormal returns

19
  • The private value of public information is
    zero
  • The private value of private information can
    be considerable
  • This distinction is at the heart of the
    conflicts of interest problem

20
Academic researchGrossman and Stiglitz (1980
AER) The Impossibility of Informationally
Efficient Markets --There is an equilibrium
degree of inefficiency
21
Underwriters
  • Affiliated Managing syndicate members
  • Lead underwriter(s)
  • Co-managers
  • Unaffiliated
  • Non-managing syndicate members
  • All others

22
Are conflicts of interest different for
affiliated and unaffiliated analysts?
  • Incumbents advantage
  • Currying favor
  • Bradley, Jordan, and Ritter (2008 RFS)
    Analyst Behavior Following IPOs The Bubble
    Period Evidence

23
Academic research focuses on public, measurable
info like EPS forecastsInstitutional investors
dont care about this infoBut are these
measurable variables correlated with useful
telephone calls?
24
A good book
  • Confessions of a Wall Street Analyst (2006)
  • by Dan Reingold with Jennifer Reingold
  • Dan Reingold was an II all-star analyst
  • who covered telecoms from 1984-2003

25
Summary
  • Analyst conflicts are difficult to regulate
    because of the economics of information
  • Information has different public and private
    value, so there is an externality
  • Academics are able to measure the public
    pronouncements, which institutional investors
    dont care about
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