Centre for Economic Policy Research
Discussion and Roundtables
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Discussion and Roundtables
Session 1: Analysts and underwriters Hans-Jörg Rudloff Barclays Capital Hans-Jörg Rudloff opened the session by observing that thinking about conflicts of interest as an issue regarding ‘analysts and underwriting’ is a narrow approach. The extent of conflict during the last few years remains exceptional both in magnitude and frequency, it is much larger and more complex than specific conflicts of interest. The role of analysts has been minor relative to that of syndicate managers, traders and to outright market manipulation. In a big bear market there is usually a hunt for culprits and finger-pointing becomes the rule. Since the handling of the problem in the press has been rather primitive, Rudloff expressed the hope that the forthcoming discussions would allow us to advance further into the understanding of the fundamental causes of conflicts of interest. John Lipsky JP Morgan Chase John Lipsky congratulated the authors for their work on a widely debated topic. He noted, however, that substantial changes in the role of analysts, the outcome of regulatory and legal decisions, are not fully discussed in the Report and yet have had an important impact on the profession. More generally, he argued that conflicts of interest must be seen in the broad context that have resulted from the securitization of markets and the changing role of intermediaries. These factors will continue to have a substantial structural impact on the role of research in financial markets. He outlined six main points: 1. There is a potential and inherent conflict of interest between the primary and secondary sides of the market. It is, however, in the interest of the securities’ firms to control this type of conflict because reputation is critical. Difficulties arise when there is a perception of a failure there, and the recent past has provided some severe lessons. 2. The Glass-Steagall Act followed the burst of a bubble that led to the Great Depression. The current situation is different. The end of a so-called ‘new era’ and the burst of a bubble have not resulted in a serious decline in economic activity. In fact, it may well be the case that productivity has permanently increased, at least in the United States. Investors are not convinced that the new economy was just an illusion. Misvaluation was mostly concentrated in the Nasdaq market, it has primarily affected a 85 limited number of entrepreneurs, the ‘Nasdaq billionaires’, who owned the bulk of the stocks of their own companies. 3. In practice, most of those guilty of conflicts of interest are less than evil; mostly they did not really know what they were talking about. The serious and most visible exceptions concern analysts who failed to disclose personal interests in the firms they were reporting on. Such interests should be disclosed and firms should control potential conflicts within their own staff and, in fact, most firms require their employees to do so. 4. In the old days, equity analysts were particularly powerful. They were implicit purveyors of what otherwise might be called insider information. They enjoyed privileged access to corporate management, which would provide them with hints and specific information that were not available to others. Recent press commentaries still emphasize the role of the analyst as an industry visionary, but this view does not survive even the most casual examination. To a certain degree, analysts are being held up in public commentaries to a standard to which no institutional investor would ever have subscribed. The Spitzer criteria for judging industry analysts is unconvincing. Do we really believe that the value of the analysts lies in the accuracy of their buy and sell recommendations? Analysts cannot judge according to the accuracy of their forecasts which depend on assumptions about the broader economic situation. They are usually not directly responsible for such assumptions. Any investigation of the analysts’ performance must be more subtle than is currently the case. 5. Most discussions in the Report focus on equity, but many underwriting firms have both corporate credit analysts – fixed-income research groups dealing with the credit quality of companies – and equity analysts. Both an equity analyst and a fixed-income analyst may be assessing the same firm and there is no obligation for their judgements to be identical. 6. Finally, the Report does not discuss the FD (‘Fair Distribution’) regulation in the United States. This regulation prevents corporate management from providing differential access to information. If, by law or regulation, management must provide the same information to everybody, the ability for research to differentiate itself in a way that was traditionally considered to be the heart of the business disappears. The Spitzer solution will have dramatic effects for the differential value of independent research on specific firms. There is already a substantial disinvestment in company research. Equity and company analysts are becoming providers of basic research. Moreover, the securitization process has already changed the nature of research as intermediaries become investors and have no more responsibility for providing credit analysis than do ‘end investors’. The responsibility for research is switching to ‘end investors’. Index funds have no interest in research. Hedge funds and private equity funds are only interested in proprietary research. To do better than the market, institutional investors need differentiated information. In a nutshell, the Spitzer solution already belongs to the past. It treats a problem that is not well defined and complicates an existing tendency of disinvestment on the Download 1.95 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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