Confessions of a Wall Street Analyst (51 page)

BOOK: Confessions of a Wall Street Analyst
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3. End Analysts’ Wall Crossings

In the end, going over the Wall is just not worth the hazards. It has become an experience that offers more risks than rewards. The potential for disclosure of nonpublic inside information is simply too great. The Chinese Wall should be rebuilt to what it was supposed to be in the first place—an impenetrable barrier that protects the private information of an investment bank’s corporate clients and keeps that information from falling into inappropriate hands, including those of stock and bond research analysts.

 

4. Extend the Post-Issuance “Restricted Periods” During Which Analysts Cannot Publish

In 2002, the NASD extended what it calls its “restricted period” for IPOs from 30 to 40 days and left the one for secondary offerings unchanged, at 10 days. A restricted period is the amount of time a securities firm and its analysts must wait after an investment banking client issues securities before discussing or publishing a research report on that company. Although the extension was the right idea, these periods are still not anywhere near long enough to reduce the pressures discussed in this book.

We need much longer restricted periods to disconnect corporate executives from the idea that their investment bank should provide supportive research. If the restricted period were as long as a year, companies would then hire bankers with the full understanding that the investment bank’s researcher will be silent for a very long time.

There should also be a long restricted period for M&A transactions, say six months from the time a deal closes, in addition to the many months between the deal’s announcement and its approval by regulators and shareholders. At best, this would encourage corporate executives to hire investment banks for their excellent advice and execution, not for favorable research. At worst, it would encourage companies to hire investment banks that do not have well-followed research analysts, flipping the influential research analyst from an asset who might attract banking business to a liability. What better way to sever these financial ties than to turn temptation upside down?

It is true that this may hurt small investors, especially individuals who have only one brokerage account and thus only one source of research. A year or more is a long time for investors to wait for research reports from the underwriter. Nevertheless, the tradeoff is a positive one.

 

5. Prohibit Analyst Commentary on M&A Banking No More SEC No-Action Letters

Talk about unintended consequences. The SEC’s 1997 No-Action Letter—the one I discussed in detail in chapter 6 that allows analysts to write about mergers even when a deal is still pending and when their own banks are involved—did as much to corrupt Wall Street research as any of the crooks did themselves. This rule actually put the analyst in an often explic
itly conflicted position. It was inadvertent; the intent was to help out individual investors who might not have access to more than one firm’s research as a deal was unfolding.

But that’s not what happened. Arthur Levitt, who was chairman of the SEC in 1997 when the letter was issued, may have given lots of speeches castigating analyst conflicts of interest. But with this letter, his agency also unleashed one of the most pernicious conflicts in the history of the analyst profession. Before the No-Action Letter, analysts whose firms were advising a company involved in a merger were prohibited from commenting on the deal or on its implications for the two stocks involved in the transaction. So a firm with an influential, well-respected,
and
bullish analyst sometimes lost a deal because the corporations involved knew the analyst couldn’t publish any reports while the deal was in process. Companies did not want to lose that analyst’s positive influence in the marketplace.

The SEC’s move turned that upside down. The regulators apparently forgot that most M&A fees aren’t paid to bankers until and unless the deal closes. So once analysts were cleared to write about pending deals, fee-hungry bankers had every incentive to push them to write positive reports. It wasn’t long before some corporate executives demanded positive research coverage as a quid pro quo for hiring investment banks as advisers on M&A deals. That, in turn, meant it now made sense for corporations, in search of supportive research commentary and higher stock prices, to hire firms with bullish or pliable analysts, fostering blatant conflicts of interest.

As suggested in point four, analysts working for banks handling mergers or acquisitions should be totally restricted from commenting on the involved companies for a long period of time, say until six months beyond the day the deal closes. That means no reports, no target prices, no investment rating, not even bare-bones, factual “outlines of the deal” reports, and no talking to clients about it. The only acceptable research, in my view, would be reports analyzing a deal’s implications for other companies in the industry, provided the implications for the two companies involved in the deal are not discussed in the report.

The implications of this reversal could be radical. Muzzling the analyst would, in my view, turn the incentive and conflict structures on their heads, just as longer restricted periods would. At best, corporate executives might hire investment banks for their excellent advisory and underwriting skills, not for favorable opinions from influential research analysts. And, at worst, companies might intentionally hire bankers whose research analyst is bear
ish in order to silence that analyst and, conversely, avoid hiring investment banks whose analyst is bullish in order to keep that bullish voice alive.

Under these rules, investment banks would have to completely reevaluate whether they wanted to pay top dollar for highly influential analysts, since research could become not just a cost center but also a repellent for investment banking fees. That’s because the more bullish and influential a firm’s researchers, the fewer deals and thus fewer banking fees might be collected. Analyst pay would go way down, as it would no longer be subsidized by the investment banking department. While this raises the risk of lessening the quality and frequency of research, it could significantly reduce the financial incentives that led to much of the dishonest and fraudulent research in the 1990s.

 

6. Make the Boss Accountable

Although he later pushed all the way to the top of the organization in companies like AIG, Eliot Spitzer, for some reason, ended his investigations of Wall Street firms before finding out whether the top executives of investment banks were involved in encouraging tainted research, IPO spinning, and other misdeeds. I think it was an enormous missed opportunity to change the culture of the Street and deter more bad behavior. Employees (in this case, analysts) often follow the cues and encouragements of their bosses. So, if only the analyst is pursued, the bosses may continue to condone or encourage bad or fraudulent behavior.

 

7. Tell Individual Investors the Painful Truth

Individuals should
not
be buying individual stocks. I know this is a radical statement, especially coming from a guy who researched individual stocks for a living. But there are simply too many insiders with too many unfair advantages. Biased research or not, insider trading or not, the markets are, and will remain, rampant with uneven information flow. Some privileged or talented professionals will always receive or ferret out information earlier than everyone else. To be an investor in this environment is like being a drug-free athlete whose competitors are all juiced up on steroids.

As you’ve read, analysts were subject to numerous and intense pressures—pressures from bankers, retail brokers, institutional money managers, buy-side analysts, hedge funds, in-house traders, even the press. Most
of these people wanted bullish calls on particular stocks. Some wanted bullish calls on every stock. Some firms—usually hedge funds—pushed for bearish calls on particular stocks they had sold short. Traders often simply wanted more trade-inducing action—more research reports, more presentations to the morning meeting, more break-in calls on the squawk box, and, if possible, louder and more extreme, or “marketable,” calls. The individual investor has no clue about all of these crosscurrents. But professional investors often use these conflicting agendas as part of their investment strategy.

Stronger enforcement of insider-trading rules can help to reduce some but not all of this unevenness. Nevertheless, individual investors should assume that the information and advice they receive regarding individual stocks are stale and, to a large degree, already incorporated into stock prices. Even the majority of professional investors find the deck is stacked against them, since it is only a minority of well-connected, high-commission-paying, deal-absorbing institutions that receive the favored information flow.

In my opinion, it’s better to buy stock indexes or broad-based mutual funds where the edge one professional fund manager may have in one stock may be offset by the advantage another fund manager has on a second stock. Hopefully, one of those groups is managing your money. But if individual investors do buy individual stocks and bonds, the rule should be
caveat emptor:
investors need to be reminded that the various strands of advice they are receiving come from people who have their own, potentially conflicted, agendas. That could be anyone from television commentators to journalists, analysts, bankers, or other groups.

In some cases, these advisers have their own investments and are trying to condition the market to support their position; in other cases, “experts” may be paid by the companies they tout. Of course, there are independent voices, but the point is that it’s impossible to know who really is and who really isn’t independent.

Of all the lessons I’ve learned in my time on the Street, the most difficult one to swallow is that I no longer believe in the transparency of the American financial system. When I came to the Street, I saw it as a place where there were plenty of sharks, but also as a place where American capitalism reigned supreme, a place where everyone had a chance to do well if they were smart, hardworking, and a little bit lucky. It was a game I enjoyed playing—at least until I realized how corrupted the game had become.

But I also came to realize that for people who don’t have access to this
inner sanctum, Wall Street is not a game at all. It’s deadly serious, and it’s rigged against most of its participants—everyone but the few with a seat at Wall Street’s special tables. If you take anything away from this book, I hope it is this unfortunate truth.

Notes

CHAPTER
1

1.
Jack Grubman, “United Telecom: Sprint Will Be the ‘DEC’ of Long Distance” (New York: PaineWebber, March 1, 1988).

2.
Morgan Stanley Research document, page 2, date unknown but believed to be 1986 (from author’s files).

3.
Michael Siconolfi, “Under Pressure: At Morgan Stanley, Analysts Were Urged to Soften Harsh Views,”
Wall Street Journal,
July 14, 1992, p. A1.

4.
Morgan Stanley, “The Equity Research Incentive Plan,” draft, internal document, (January 23, 1990) p. 3.

CHAPTER
2

1.
Michael Siconolfi, “Under Pressure: At Morgan Stanley, Analysts Were Urged to Soften Harsh Views,”
Wall Street Journal,
July 14, 1992, p. A1.

CHAPTER
3

1.
United States vs. Jeffrey Sudikoff and Edward Cheramy,
case no. CR 97-1176-DDP, June 1996. Grand Jury charges, pp. 8–13, paragraphs 18–28.

2.
Thomas C. Newkirk and Steven A. Yadegari, “Recent SEC Financial Fraud Re
porting Cases and SEC Cases Involving Accountants and Auditors,” U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement, Jan. 9, 2002, p. 16.

3.
U.S. District Court, Central District of California,
U.S. vs. Jeffrey Sudikoff and Edward Cheramy.
Plea Agreement for Jeffrey P. Sudikoff, case no. CR 97-1176-DDP, February 19, 1999. Plea Agreement for Edward Cheramy, same case number and name, May 28, 1999.

4.
Mark Landler, “The Siskel and Ebert of Telecom Investing,”
New York Times,
February 4, 1996, sec. 3, p. 1.

5.
Institutional Investor,
“The Class of 1972: Where Are They Now?” October 1, 2001, p. 112.

6.
Mark Landler, “The Siskel and Ebert of Telecom Investing,”
New York Times,
February 4, 1996, sec. 3, p. 1.

CHAPTER
4

1.
Jack Grubman, “Merrill Commentary on Teleport/MFS Comparison Flawed” (New York: Salomon Brothers, June 18, 1996).

2.
Stephen E. Frank, “Analysts Pay Set a Record Last Year,”
The Wall Street Journal,
June 29, 1994, p. C2.

3.
Anita Raghavan, “For Salomon, Grubman is the Big Rainmaker,”
Wall Street Journal,
March 25, 1997, p. C1.

CHAPTER
5

1.
Steven Lipin, “British Telecommunications and MCI Unveil $20.88 Billion Merger Agreement,”
Wall Street Journal,
November 4, 1996, p. A1.

2.
Richard Waters, “Curtain Still to Rise on the Concert,”
Financial Times,
July 17, 1997, p. 26.

3.
Gary Weiss with Phillip Zweig, Debra Sparks, and Kerry Capell in New York; Leah Nathans Spiro in Hong Kong; and bureau reports; “Sandy’s Triumph,”
Business Week,
October 6, 1997, p. 34.

4.
David Faber,
Power Lunch,
CNBC, August 21, 1997, 12:30–2:00
PM
.

5.
Jack Grubman, “Ramifications of SBC Announcements: Bell vs. Bell Warfare” (New York: Salomon Smith Barney, May 11, 1998, 10:09
AM
).

6.
Jack Grubman, “CLECs Surpass Bells in Net Business Line Additions for the First Time” (New York: Salomon Smith Barney, May 6, 1998).

7.
Jack Grubman, “Ramifications of SBC Announcements: Bell vs. Bell Warfare” (New York: Salomon Smith Barney, May 11, 1998, 10:09
AM
).

8.
Jack Grubman, “SBC: Upgrade to Buy; SBC Separating Itself From Other Bells” (New York: Salomon Smith Barney, January 7, 1999).

CHAPTER
6

1.
Lynn Margherio, (project director),
The Emerging Digital Economy,
U.S. Department of Commerce, April 1998, p. 2.

2.
Blaise Zerega, “The Next Ma Bell,”
Red Herring,
May 1999, no page number available.

3.
Level 3, “Underwriters Performance Review for Equity Offering,” company document, February 23, 1999.

4.
Jack Grubman, “Level 3 Communications: Optimizing a Layer of the Telecom Value Chain: The Intel Inside of Telecom” (New York: Salomon Smith Barney, February 22, 1999).

5.
Barbara Martinez, “Analyst’s Report on Level 3 Sparks Questions of Timing,”
Wall Street Journal,
April 3, 1999, p. C1.

6.
Kate O’Sullivan, “Flashbacks: 20 Years of Finance,”
CFO Magazine,
March 2005, no page number available.

7.
Linda C. Quinn, (Shearman & Sterling), “Research Reports and Proxy Rules,” letter for Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc., October 21, 1997.

8.
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, “Response of the Office of Chief Counsel and the Office of Mergers and Acquisitions, Division of Corporation Finance Re: Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated (the ‘Company’), Incoming letter dated October 21, 1997,” October 24, 1997.

CHAPTER
7

1.
“The 1999 All-American Research Team,”
Institutional Investor,
October 1, 1999, p. 120.

2.
Seth Schiesel, “Private Sector: A Tele-Miscommunications Deal,”
New York Times,
May 23, 1999, sec. 3, p. 2.

3.
Linda Himelstein, with Steve Hamm and Peter Burrows, “Inside Frank Quattrone’s Money Machine,”
Business Week,
October 13, 2003, p. 104.

4.
Avital Hahn, “Defections Disrupt Telecom Research at Merrill,”
Investment Dealer’s Digest,
December 20, 1999, no page number available.

5.
Rebecca Blumenstein, “AT&T Mulls Wireless IPO to Get Capital,”
Wall Street Journal,
November 26, 1999, p. A3.

6.
Randall Smith and Leslie Cauley, “Will Upgrade of AT&T Stock Help Salomon Smith Barney?”
Wall Street Journal,
December 6, 1999, p. C1.

7.
Steven Lipin and Rebecca Blumenstein, “Fee Frenzy: Wall Street Heavyweights Feast on AT&T’s Offering,”
The Wall Street Journal,
February 4, 2000, p. C1.

CHAPTER
8

1.
Bloomberg News, “Michael Jordan Sues MCI over Ad Deal,”
Los Angeles Times,
March 4, 2005, p. C3.

2.
Thor Valdmanis, “German Phone Giant in Talks with Qwest,”
USA Today,
March 1, 2000, p. 1B.

3.
Recorded proceedings of the CSFB Global Telecom CEO Conference, March 6–10, 2000, the Plaza Hotel, New York City.

4.
Ibid.

5.
Ibid.

6.
Ibid.

7.
Andrew Backover, “US West’s Trujillo Hangs It Up: 1 Head Better than 2 After Merger, He Decides,”
Denver Post,
March 1, 2000, p. A1.

8.
Recorded proceedings of the CSFB Global Telecom CEO Conference, March 6–10, 2000, the Plaza Hotel, New York City.

9.
Jamey Keaten, “Qwest, US West Are Edgy: After Telekom’s Failed Bid, an Uneasy Alliance Could Affect Companies’ Stocks,” CNN/Money.com, March 10, 2000, http://money.com.cnn/2000/03/10/deals/qwest_analysis.

10.
Andrew Kupfer, “Bernie’s Big Gamble: Ebbers Wants It All: Voice and Data, Local and Global, Business and Consumers. Sprint May Help Him Get It,”
Fortune,
April 17, 2000, p. 178.

11.
Dan Reingold, “WorldCom: There Must Be Some Way Out of Here—But All Lead to Lower Target Prices” (New York: Credit Suisse First Boston, June 27,2000) p. 1.

12.
U.S. Department of Justice, “U.S. Justice Department Sues to Block WorldCom’s Acquisition of Sprint,” press release, June 27, 2000.

13.
Peter Elstrom, “The Power Broker,”
Business Week,
May 15, 2000, pp. 72–3.

14.
Ibid.

15.
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, “Commission Votes to End Selective Disclosure,” 2000–112, press release, August 10, 2000.

16.
Randall Smith, Deborah Salomon, and Suzanne McGee, “Grubman’s Missed Call on AT&T Stock Could Affect Influential Analyst’s Stature,”
Wall Street Journal,
October 4, 2000, p. C1.

17.
“WorldCom, Inc. Issues New Financial Guidance,” press release, November 1, 2000, author’s files.

18.
Patrick Ross, “WorldCom CEO loses his swagger,” CNET news.com, November 1, 2000, http://news.com/2102-1033_3-247973.html.

CHAPTER
9

1.
Stephanie N. Mehta, “Can Bernie Bounce Back?”
Fortune,
January 22, 2001, p. 84.

2.
“CSFB’s Reingold on Possible WorldCom Sale: Analyst Comment,” Bloomberg News, March 7, 2001.

3.
Christopher Caldwell, “Literary Heroes of the Stock-Market Crash,”
Daily Standard,
October 3, 2002, no page number available.

4.
Rebecca Blumenstein, “Overbuilt Web: How the Fiber Barons Plunged the Nation into a Telecom Glut,”
Wall Street Journal,
June 18, 2001, p. A1.

5.
Peter Elstrom, “On the Firing Line at Qwest,”
Business Week,
October 29, 2001, p. 72; Bill Mann, “Eyes on the Wise,” The Motley Fool.com, June 22, 2001, http://aol.fool.com/news/2001/9010622.htm.

6.
Peter Elstrom, “On the Firing Line at Qwest,”
Business Week,
October 29, 2001, p. 72.

7.
Peter Elkind with Mary Danehy, Jessica Sung, and Julie Schlosser, “Where Mary Meeker Went Wrong,”
Fortune,
May 14, 2001, p. 68.

8.
Gretchen Morgenson, “S.E.C. Warns Investors on Analysts,”
New York Times,
June 30, 2001, p. C1.

CHAPTER
10

1.
Julie Creswell with Nomi Prins, “The Emperor of Greed; With the Help of His Bankers, Gary Winnick Treated Global Crossing as His Personal Cash Cow—Until the Company Went Bankrupt,”
Fortune,
June 24, 2002, p. 106.

2.
Gretchen Morgenson and Timothy L. O’Brien, “When Citigroup Met WorldCom,”
New York Times,
May 16, 2004, sec. 3, p. 1.

3.
Geraldine Fabrikant, “As Shares Sink, Some Executives Shed Costly Toys,”
New York Times,
March 24, 2002, sec. 3, p. 7.

4.
Emily Thornton with Peter Elstrom in New York and Mike McNamee in Washington, “Trying to Build a Wall on Wall Street: How Far Will New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer Be Able to Separate Research Analysts and Investment Bankers?,”
Business Week,
April 29, 2002, p. 40.

5.
Jack Grubman, “WCOM: Dramatic Change in EBITDA Guid. Too Much to Ignore—Downgrade to Neutral” (New York: Salomon Smith Barney, April 21,2002).

6.
Kris Hudson and Miles Moffeit, “Unmasking Qwest,”
Denver Post,
December 17, 2002, p. A1.

7.
“SEC Files Charges Against Ex-Qwest Chief Nacchio,”
Wall Street Journal,
March 15, 2005.

8.
Securities and Exchange Commission, Plaintiff, vs. Joseph P. Nacchio, Robert
S. Woodruff, Robin R. Szeliga, Afshin Mohebbi, Gregory M. Casey, James J. Kozlowski, Frank T. Noyes,
Civil Action No. 05-MK-480 (OES), March 15,2005.

9.
U.S. Congress House Committee on Financial Services Hearing,
Wrong Numbers: The Accounting Problems at WorldCom,
serial no. 107–74, July 8, 2002, 1st session.

10.
Jared Sandberg, “Bernie Ebbers Bet the Ranch—Really—on WorldCom Stock,”
Wall Street Journal,
April 12, 2002 (as retransmitted by the Associated Press).

11.
Steven Rosenbush with Heather Timmons, Roger O. Crockett, Christopher Palmieri, and Charles Haddad, “Inside the Telecom Game: How Salomon’s Jack Grubman Wheeled and Dealed with WorldCom, Qwest, Global Crossing, and Others,”
Business Week,
August 5, 2002, pp. 34–40.

12.
Charles Gasparino,
Blood on the Street: The Sensational Inside Story of How Wall Street Analysts Duped a Generation of Investors
(New York: Free Press, 2005), p. 276.

13.
Gretchen Morgenson, “Bullish Analyst of Tech Stocks Quits Salomon,”
New York Times,
August 16, 2002, p. A1.

14.
Citigroup, “Telecom Analyst Jack Grubman to Leave Salomon Smith Barney,” press release, August 15, 2002.

15.
Securities and Exchange Commission, Plaintiff vs. Joseph P. Nacchio, Robert S.
Woodruff, Robin R. Szeliga, Afshin Mohebbi, Gregory M. Casey, James J. Kozlowski, Frank T. Noyes, Civil Action No. 05-MK-480 (OES), March 15, 2005.

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