Post-Enron, Investors Seek Inside Story Sat Mar 23, 9:57 AM ET
By Thi Nguyen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - When companies have problems, company executives should be the first to know.
So investors looking for clues to avoid the kind of corporate blowups that hit Enron are now scrutinizing activities of other companies' insiders, especially when they sell dump their own stocks.
As a result, data companies that track the share dealings of executive are finding that their services are in stronger demand than ever.
"Interest in insider selling has never been so high," said Lon Gerber, director or research at Thomson Financial/Lancer Analytics, which provides insider trading data.
Gerber said that investors are poring through insider dealings whenever accounting questions arise, not just at Enron, but at Tyco International Ltd and other companies.
"For the last two months, any time there's an accounting irregularity, clients call us up and ask what insiders were doing six months ago," he added.
Investors who followed the insider activity at Tyco would have had a tip-off of trouble back in November, when top executives reported that they sold some $100 million worth of Tyco shares back to the company over the past fiscal year.
Still, even after the disclosure, Tyco shares continued to go up for more than a month. By early December, they went into a tailspin that didn't end until late January, after two-thirds of their value had been wiped out.
In the meantime, Tyco's problems began to surface, as analysts and investors in January began seriously questioning the company's accounting practices and its plan to split into four parts.
The Tyco case shows how the insider dealings might have provided advance warning. Now insider selling is "a piece of evidence you want to watch," said Warren Spitz, portfolio manager at American Express Asset Management Group.
"When we see major surprises (in insider transactions), we would call management and ask why they are doing what they are doing," said Spitz. "We would take a closer look at our assumptions on the stock. We would take a closer look at recent 10-Qs to see if there's anything we haven't picked up before."
The Form 10-Q is the mandatory quarterly report of earnings and operations that must be filed by publicly traded companies with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (news - web sites).
Some Web sites, including Yahoo and Multex Investor's Marketguide.com, also publish records of recent insider sales, but with some lagging and without analysis.
DRAWBACKS: THE WHEN AND WHY
But there are at least two problems for investors in following insiders' steps: First, the regulations allow long delays before investors are required to report insider trades. Next, when insiders do sell, it's hard to say why they are doing it.
"The biggest problem is loopholes in regulations that allow management to change their economic positions in the companies without having to let investors know in a timely manner," said Bill Nygren, portfolio manager at Oakmark Select Fund, a top value fund. "I would love to see reforms on that rule."
As it stands today, companies must report insider trades on the open market by the tenth of the next month, meaning their sales can go unreported for up to 40 days.
But there's a big loophole, even in this relatively lax accounting system. Since 1991, for executives who sell stock as part of an internal company transaction -- for example, to repay a company loan or to reallocate money within a 401(k) -- have had the choice of not reporting the sales until 45 days after their fiscal year-end. That means the sales can go undetected for more than 13 months.
Enron's former chairman and chief executive Kenneth Lay only reported last February about his sales of some $70 million worth of Enron shares back to the company in the prior year -- which dwarfed the $16 million in his earlier-reported open market sales. The reports came too late to do investors any good.
Enron stock was traded at $45-$50 when Lay sold the shares last year. By the time he reported the trades, it was worth 25 cents per share.
Similarly, Tyco's chief executive Dennis Kozlowski and chief financial officer Mark H Swartzsold sold some $100 million worth of Tyco shares back to the company without investors' knowledge for up to 13 months.
The vast majority of this kind of sales indeed seem to be for executives' personal needs or for technical reasons of little important to investors. But without them, Enron's and Tyco's sales on the open market last year alone "wouldn't have raised the red flag," Gerber said.
TIMELY INFORMATION
The rules on disclosures will likely change for the better, at least for investors: Early this month, Congress and regulators released a rough draft of the post-Enron rule book for U.S. business, including proposals to shorten the time that executives have to report their trades. President Bush (news - web sites) even said he would require top executives to disclose insider trades within two days of the transaction.
"It'll be better for investors to get the information sooner rather than later," said Gerber.
But if disclosure rules are tightened, it will still be difficult for them to know whey insiders are selling.
Last year, in the midst of a recession and a declining market, company insiders sold about $19 worth of stock for every $1 they bought, according to Gerber.
That could trigger a lot of selling, if investors dumped their stocks each time a company official sold. But retail investors could learn from the pros when it comes to reading the insider data.
Individual investors tend to put a "tremendous focus on insider selling, especially with companies that are struggling or those with accounting issues," said Gerber.
In contrast, "Money managers focus more on purchases because they give much stronger signal," he said. Insiders have little incentive to buy shares if they don't think they'll go up, but they have many reasons to sell -- it could be to diversify their investments or to pay for their children's education.
"When you look at selling -- It's more art than science," said Oakmark's Nygren. "We have to look back to see if management has enough invested in the company for them to think like owners."
For example, if executives sold big volumes of holdings but still have 90 percent of their net worth invested in the company, that wouldn't raise the red flag for Nygren.
Other early signals include when there are several insiders selling at the same time, when there are only sales and no purchases for several months, or when the level of sales is much higher than in the past, said Nygren.
"It's not black or white," said Nygren. "It's just a piece of the puzzle."
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