This is why you will sell S3 into a several point rally and buy dips that go lower, this is how the game is being played.
Access Denied: Some Investors Lose When Kept Out
New York, Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- During the first 30 minutes of trading on Aug. 12, Mark Trautman watched the market value of Clorox Co. drop by $1.8 billion, or 14.5 percent, costing him $1 million.
The bleach maker had reported a 6 percent gain in fiscal- fourth-quarter profit on a 3 percent drop in sales. Trautman, who invests $65 million at Shay Asset Management in New York, was convinced something else had caused Clorox stock to drop 15 points. Little did he know that Clorox Chairman Craig Sullivan was warning investors and analysts on an invitation-only conference call that profit wouldn't meet expectations for the next two quarters. ''It's outrageous that I didn't have the same information as some others'' says Trautman, who now holds 92,000 Clorox shares. ''I was completely in the dark.''
Almost daily, companies from Wal-Mart Stores Inc. to Apple Computer Inc. to Abercrombie & Fitch Co. dole out market-moving information to big investors and analysts in conference calls, closed-door meetings, or one-on-one conversations. That gives some large investors a chance to bail out or profit and leaves some smaller money managers at a disadvantage.
Selective Disclosure
When companies parcel out critical information to some investors and not to others, it's known as selective disclosure. While experts don't always agree on when it occurs or even whether it's illegal, regulators say selective disclosure is unethical and damages the integrity of the stock market. ''Selectiveness is a disservice to investors, and it undermines the fundamental principle of fairness,'' U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission chairman Arthur Levitt said in an October speech in New York. ''The practice is downright deceptive and verges on illegality.''
Everyone with a stake in the stock market is affected by selective disclosure. About 78.7 million people own shares -- either directly or through mutual funds and pension plans -- up 86 percent from 1983, according to a survey by the Investment Company Institute and the Securities Industry Association.
Yet many money managers can't get timely information from companies. ''The playing field isn't level,'' says Fredric Russell, chief executive of Fredric E. Russell Investment Management Co., a Tulsa, Oklahoma, firm that manages $75 million. ''Some investors are more equal than others.''
Making Distinctions
And there's no sign that that distinction will change anytime soon.
Some recent examples: -- In July, at the annual Sun Valley, Idaho, summer conference held by investment bank Allen & Co., Pixar chief executive Steve Jobs told a gathering of other CEOs and powerful investors that his animation studio would beat quarterly earnings estimates. That information gave those at the meeting a head start in buying the stock, which gained as much as 6 percent that day. -- Officials at Apple Computer, Jobs's other company, called up several Wall Street analysts on September 23 to tell them that an earthquake in Taiwan had disrupted computer production and could reduce quarterly revenue by as much as $50 million. Within three days, Apple shares fell more than 7 percent. -- On Oct. 8 an Abercrombie & Fitch Co. senior executive told a Lazard Freres & Co. analyst that the retailer's third- quarter sales would fall short of expectations. The company said nothing publicly for five days, giving Lazard's clients a big head start to sell shares or short them, essentially betting on a decline. The stock dropped 15 percent before the company confirmed the sales shortfall.
Nothing to Hide ''News has a way of filtering first to the ears of big, powerful investors and analysts,'' says Carl Domino, who manages $2.4 billion at Carl Domino Associates in West Palm Beach, Florida. ''Some get invited to meetings before others. That's the way corporate America works.''
Companies say they're not trying to hide anything and have legitimate reasons for giving information to a screened group of investment professionals. ''It's not feasible to invite everyone on a conference call,'' says Craig Manson, vice president of investor relations at Ceridian Corp. of Minneapolis, which provides human resources services such as payroll processing for corporations. ''Conference calls are an enormous expense, a huge chunk of my budget.'' He says a quarterly conference call that may include as many as 120 analysts and investors costs more than $10,000.
Conference Calls
Conference calls cost companies a flat fee plus at least 30 cents per line per minute and additional charges for archiving the presentations and replays. If Ceridian held four conference calls per year at a total cost of $50,000, that would amount to less than 1/100 of 1 percent of the $393.8 million it spent on selling, general, and administrative (SG&A) costs last year.
Wal-Mart, the world's biggest retailer, says the lines would clog if it opened up conference calls to all of its interested shareholders. ''Physically, we'd have a hard time getting everybody on,'' says Wal-Mart senior vice president and treasurer Jay Fitzsimmons, who also cited the expense of hosting a teleconference. Wal-Mart had SG&A costs of $22.4 billion last year.
Other companies don't want small investors on their calls because, they say, these listeners might be misled. ''Ours isn't a simple call,'' says Joseph Kolshak, director of investor relations at Delta Air Lines, the third-largest U.S. airline. ''It's really targeted for a specialized audience.''
Gillette Co., Caterpillar Inc. and International Business Machine Corp. say they prefer that small investors get their information from the Wall Street analysts who track the companies. ''We're more comfortable with individual investors' getting an account of the calls from the analysts,'' says Hervey Parke, IBM's director of investor relations.
Big Investors
Big investors and analysts -- those who benefit the most from selective disclosure -- like the practice. ''I don't mind companies' restricting attendance on calls and conferences-as long as I'm invited,'' says Anthony Valencia, an analyst at Van Deventer & Hoch, a Glendale, California, firm that manages $1.5 billion. ''As a big investor with a big stake in the company, of course I appreciate having a head start on critical information before others.''
Wall Street analysts also covet the inside scoop so vital to enticing prospective investors to buy. Company executives, in turn, mete out information to gain favor with brokerage analysts whose influential buy recommendations can make or break stocks. ''Executives believe they'll get good coverage from analysts if they give them selected information,'' says Brian Bruce, a finance professor at Southern Methodist University's graduate business school who studies the flow of information from companies to investors. 'Promoters, Marketers'
The SEC's Levitt is blunt in his condemnation of the ties between Wall Street and companies. ''Analysts act more like promoters and marketers than unbiased and dispassionate analysts,'' Levitt said in his October speech, calling the ties between companies and analysts ''a web of dysfunctional relationships.''
Some companies invoke federal copyright law either to restrict access to the conference calls or to prevent distribution of recordings to those who couldn't attend.
For the past year, General Motors Corp., the world's largest automaker, has been copyrighting its conference calls to deter others from rebroadcasting them and to ward off some listeners. Copyright law, though, doesn't confer the ownership of calls that those companies assert, says David Nimmer, the leading expert on the subject in the U.S. and author of ''Nimmer on Copyright,'' a 10-volume work that has been cited multiple times by the U.S. Supreme Court. Copyright law, he says, doesn't cover conference calls because such calls involve impromptu conversations between several parties and are not written statements. ''Federal copyright law doesn't apply to conference calls because it only applies to works fixed in a tangible medium of expression,'' says Nimmer, a lawyer with the Los Angeles firm Irell & Manella. ''A conversation wouldn't qualify.''
Jawboning
The SEC has done plenty of jawboning to discourage selective disclosure, but little else.
That's because the law is far from clear on the issue, says John Coffee, a Columbia University professor of securities law. While SEC rules prohibit selective disclosure, the agency has never specified what it is. ''The SEC hasn't tried to push on selective disclosure,'' Coffee says, ''in part because it hasn't spelled out what it is but also because it's hard to prove.'' The SEC would be able to prosecute selective disclosure, he adds, only when it's clearly insider trading.
SEC Action
One exception came in March 1991, when the SEC filed what it said was its first insider trading case against a company executive for leaking information to brokerage analysts.
The SEC alleged the founder and former chairman of Ultrasystems Inc. of Irvine, Calif., had warned a group of stock analysts in May 1987 about company earnings. Two of the analysts passed the information to customers, who sold Ultrasystems shares before the company publicly announced the news, which sent the stock down.
The SEC charged that though the retired executive, Phillip J. Stevens, didn't profit financially, he benefited because his reputation was enhanced in the eyes of analysts. Stevens settled the SEC charges by paying $126,455 in penalties. He neither admitted nor denied the allegations. The SEC hasn't filed any lawsuits over selective disclosure since then.
Selective disclosure takes on new meaning in an era when more and more amateur traders are making their own investment decisions. Online investors now account for 500,000 trades daily, or one in six U.S. stock transactions.
Getting Even
In 1997 Mark Coker, a public relations specialist from Los Gatos, California, owned 3,000 shares of Legato Systems, a maker of software that backs up and recovers computer data. When he tried to get onto a Legato conference call, the company denied him access.
Coker, who's now 34, vowed to get even. He sold his Legato shares at a profit of $120,000 and in March 1999 started BestCalls.com, a Web site that tracks conference calls and aims to prod companies into full disclosure. ''The information is out there,'' Coker says. ''And the public wants it.''
But many companies refuse to provide it, and conference calls aren't the only venue where they give preferential treatment to big shareholders.
In late September, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co. invited guests to attend a two-day mining-industry conference in New York, at which Bethlehem Steel Corp. chairman and chief executive Curtis Barnette discussed the company's third- and fourth-quarter earnings forecasts and Samuel Siegel, chief financial officer of number two U.S. steelmaker Nucor Corp., talked about the company's acquisition strategy. ''We pay an absolute fortune so our clients flying out from Los Angeles or Stuttgart have access to these companies,'' says Morgan Stanley analyst Wayne Atwell, who helped organize the conference. ''We don't want any Joe Blow to waltz in.''
In July, at the 17th annual investor summit sponsored by billionaire Herbert Allen's Allen & Co., Steve Jobs, CEO of Pixar, spoke to a group of invited CEOs and investors that included Microsoft Corp.'s Bill Gates; Viacom's Sumner Redstone; Amazon.com's Jeffrey Bezos; Michael Bloomberg, founder and CEO of Bloomberg LP; Mario Gabelli of Gabelli Asset Management; Fayez Sarofim of Fayez Sarofim & Co.; and billionaire Warren Buffett.
Jobs, who cofounded Apple Computer, touted better-than- expected results from ''A Bug's Life,'' the company's animated movie that pulled in more than $360 million at the box office. With that information, investors had a head start in buying shares of Pixar, which gained 6 percent from its low that day and almost 10 percent in the next week, as word of the bullish forecast made its way to small investors.
Sometimes selective disclosure is not a matter of restricted access; it's a matter of loose lips or an intentional tip-off.
On Oct. 8 an Abercrombie & Fitch executive left a voice mail message with Lazard Freres retail analyst Todd Slater signaling that fiscal-third-quarter sales were sluggish, according to a person close to the situation. Lazard had been one of the lead underwriters on Abercrombie's 1996 initial public stock offering.
Moving Markets
Slater, who won't reveal the name of the executive, then told Lazard's sales force, which distributed the market-moving news to several key clients. These clients were able to sell their holdings early or short the shares, a tactic that lets investors profit when a stock drops.
BancBoston Robertson Stephens analyst Janet Kloppenburg says she called the company, seeking an explanation for the stock's 13 percent drop that day. ''They didn't tell me anything,'' she says. ''They didn't want to talk about it at that time.''
The clothing retailer kept silent for the next five days as Lazard clients bailed out, and it refused to discuss its quarterly outlook with other investors and analysts who called and asked why the stock was dropping. Then, on Oct. 13, Abercrombie issued a press release warning that sales would lag expectations, driving its stock down another 20 percent. ''That's inexcusable, and there should be some action taken,'' says Bill McVail of Turner Investment Partners, which dumped its entire Abercrombie holding the day the company issued its press release.
Abercrombie & Fitch on Nov. 12 said the SEC had opened an informal investigation of the incident. The company also said its investor-relations director, Lonnie Fogel, was told to take a leave of absence ''because of this episode.''
Disclosure Failure
Six lawsuits have since been filed on behalf of Abercrombie investors. The suits allege the company failed to properly disclose the sales decline to all shareholders, defrauding investors who didn't have early access to the information. Abercrombie officials decline to comment.
Apple Computer officials were busy calling up Wall Street analysts on Sept. 23. The message: The earthquake that had shaken Taiwan three days earlier had disrupted production of iBook and PowerBook notebook computers. That would cut revenue for the quarter ending September 30 by about $50 million, the company said.
Within three days, Apple shares fell more than 7 percent. Many investors were in the dark the entire time. ''I am not happy that they actually called the analysts,'' says Robert Koh, a broker at ABN Amro. ''It sets a bad precedent. Apple should release a statement officially instead.''
Apple spokeswoman Rhona Hamilton says the company didn't think the information was important enough to warrant a news release and that when analysts posed questions, Apple supplied answers. ''These people asked us about Taiwan, and when we had the information, we called them back,'' she says.
Change Afoot
Change appears to be brewing. Levitt, angered that selective disclosure is so widespread, is pushing the SEC to consider rules to force companies to open up. ''We want to close the gap between those in the so-called 'know' and the rest of us,'' Levitt said in his October New York speech.
But any new SEC rules would face a gauntlet of opposition from businesses and organizations such as the National Investor Relations Institute, a 4,200-member association of corporate officers and investor-relations consultants. ''Our capital markets are working pretty darn well,'' says Louis Thompson, president of NIRI. ''The rules need some tweaking, that's all.''
Making an Effort
More and more companies are making an effort to give all shareholders equal access. In a June survey of 412 U.S. companies, sponsored by NIRI, 55 percent said they let small investors listen to conference calls, up from 29 percent a year ago. Forty-two percent let reporters listen to teleconferences, a threefold increase from 14 percent a year earlier. ''That's a real sea change when it comes to equal access to information,'' Thompson says.
On March 25 ConAgra, the producer of Butterball turkeys and Healthy Choice meals, invited a select group of shareholders and analysts to participate in a conference call. Management warned them that fourth-quarter profit would miss earnings forecasts. ConAgra shares promptly fell 9 percent.
The company never issued a press release forecasting the anticipated shortfall. Several shareholders not on the call protested, and ConAgra, the second-largest U.S. food company, decided to mend its ways. ''We stepped back and we asked ourselves, 'How can we do this in the most fair way?''' says ConAgra Chief Financial Officer James O'Donnell. ''Now we want to make sure that the Wall Street analyst is getting exactly the same information as Aunt Betsy in Montana.''
Starting last summer, ConAgra began publishing earnings reports after the close of New York Stock Exchange trading and at the same time issuing a press release that invites all shareholders to listen by phone or on the Internet to top executives discussing the results. That call is taped, and shareholders can access it anytime over the following two weeks by dialing into a special number.
Investors Invited
Investors also are invited to call O'Donnell or Chief Executive Bruce Rohde with questions. Those two then take calls or return them later -- sometimes late into the first night and for several days after, O'Donnell says.
AT&T Corp., too, has decided to put its conference calls and written comments on strategy and finances on its Internet site at the same moment it distributes that information to Wall Street. ''We've had it as a policy to broaden our disclosure,'' says AT&T Chief Financial Officer Dan Somers. ''We had a long period of time where our general communications was relatively couched and not broad.''
About 700 investors phone in to the company's quarterly conference calls, and thousands more have hooked up via the Internet to listen to a simulcast of the call, the company says. With about 3.5 million shareholders, AT&T is one of the most widely held U.S. stocks, according to Merrill Lynch, which tracks such data.
A Mission
Somers, who joined AT&T about two years ago, says he had made it his mission to end the distinctions between treatment of small and large investors. ''We don't want to play favorites with any of our holders and want everyone to have the same information,'' Somers says, adding that because of its huge base of shareholders, AT&T believes it should advocate for shareholder rights and prod others to open up.
The Internet may be the great democratizer, letting even the smallest investors join analysts and money managers when they tune in for potentially market-moving news. ''The Internet is the ideal medium to level the playing field,'' says Tom Gonzales, CEO of StreetFusion, a San Francisco Web broadcasting company that hosts more than 1,000 corporate conference calls each quarter. ''It's cheap, it's ubiquitous, and it's easy to use.''
On the Net
Companies such as Amazon.com and Iomega Corp. already use the Internet to broadcast information they once parceled out to the chosen few. The Internet also is cheap. A 45-minute Web broadcast costs less than $600 and can reach thousands of investors.
So far, though, few companies are biting. Only 10 percent of 490 companies surveyed by NIRI said they host Internet conference calls. And, for the time being, the Internet is a less-than-ideal medium for communicating with investors, because it's so unreliable.
Southern Co., the largest U.S. electricity producer, knows all about the shortcomings of the Internet. On July 20 the Atlanta company planned to hold an online conference call to review second-quarter earnings. Kinks in its computer system, though, caused a five-hour delay in posting the call on its Web site following the 9 a.m. teleconference.
Shareholder advocates say that all of the reasons cited by companies for opposing full disclosure -- it's too expensive, it's too risky, it's not required, it's technologically difficult -- don't add up to much, especially when companies like ConAgra and AT&T have shown that widely accessed conference calls can be staged without much trouble. ''There's always excuses and justifications for why companies can't open up their calls or access to management,'' says Patrick McGurn of Institutional Shareholder Services, a shareholder advocacy group in Bethesda, Maryland. ''Face it: Companies like having a wall between them and the investment community.''
The forces breaking down those walls are gaining strength. The SEC's Levitt wants to end selective disclosure, and so do the legions of smaller investors who demand access to the same information as the privileged few. All that stands in their way are the analysts and big money managers who've gained from getting the best tidbits first -- and the companies that don't give equal treatment to all of their shareholders. |