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October 27, 1997
Who Really Moves the Market, Part 1
Securities analysts are Wall Street's new stars: They bring in banking deals, make the calls that move billions in and out of stocks daily, and earn millions for themselves. They play a strange game with an odd set of rules. Here's how it works.
Joseph Nocera Reporter Associate: Amy Kover
Last Aug. 22 was an important day if you were an owner of Intel stock. A lazy, late summer Friday, it was the kind of day when half of Wall Street has already left for the weekend, when news is sparse and trading is thin. The kind of day, in other word s, when a securities analyst with a big reputation can knock the stuffing out of a stock with a ratings change.
Early that morning, several hours before the market opened, Thomas P. Kurlak, who follows semiconductor stocks for Merrill Lynch, got on the squawk box at his New York office and stunned the firm's sales force with an unexpected bit of news: He was do wngrading Intel from "strong buy" to "neutral." Merrill Lynch's legions of salesmen immediately began phoning the big institutional shareholders--mutual funds, hedge funds, pension funds, and the like--that have made Intel one of the h alf-dozen most important stocks of this raging bull market. For these institutions, collectively known as the "buy side," this was big: Kurlak was the dominant voice on Intel, and his rating changes always move the stock's price. Sure enough, ev en before the market opened that morning, Intel had dropped $7, to $91 a share.
Roll your cursor along the graph.
At the same time, on the other side of the country, Mark Edelstone was beginning his first day on the job in Morgan Stanley Dean Witter's San Francisco office. In his previous job as a semiconductor analyst at Prudential Securities, he had gained a fol lowing on Intel--so much so that Morgan Stanley had recruited him in the belief that he might one day challenge Kurlak as the "ax" on the stock. When he left Prudential two months before, he had a "neutral" rating on Intel.
That morning, Edelstone got on the squawk box too. Addressing Morgan Stanley's sales force, he unveiled his initial list of stock recommendations. He had Intel rated as an "outperform." Which meant, in effect, that he was upgrading the stock.
When word of Edelstone's Intel recommendation reached the Street, it had an electrifying effect. Though the timing of the calls was coincidental, the subtext was plain: Wall Street's two most prominent analysts on Intel were crossing swords, taking opp osing positions on the short-term prospects for the stock. When both men scheduled 10 A.M. conference calls with buy-side institutions, it was clear to everyone that Intel stockholders were in for a bruising day.
And what had Intel done to warrant all this attention? Nothing at all. There had been no new earnings projection, no big personnel change, no product announcement. These days, such things aren't necessary to move a stock. The howl of the analysts is su fficient.
The 1990s have become the Age of the Analyst on Wall Street. It is a startling turn of events: Not long ago securities analysts were the mole-like civil servants of the brokerage world. Their role was to produce lengthy, bone-dry reports on the strengt hs and weaknesses of publicly traded companies, which were mailed (mailed!) to clients. The work had nothing to do with the short-term movement of stock prices.
But with the cascade of money into the stock market over the past two decades, the requirements placed on securities analysts have changed completely. For shareholders large and small, this is no longer a buy-and-hold world; people want to know what a stock is going to do tomorrow. Predicting the short-term movement of a stock has become so central to an analyst's job description that an old-timer looking in on his colleagues today wouldn't even recognize the profession.
With this change has come a shift in the balance of power: Analysts have become the hubs around which much of Wall Street's profitmaking activities occur. For stockbrokers, analysts' recommendations are essential tools to persuade clients to buy or sel l stocks ("Our guy just downgraded Microsoft. You might want to think about lightening up.") For traders who handle major stock transactions, analysts generate millions of dollars in commissions. That's because buy-side institutions, by long-sta nding convention, reward the analysts they value by placing trades with the analysts' firms.
Finally, analysts have become vital to the business of investment banking. When a Wall Street firm wants to take a company public, for instance, it must have the endorsement of its own analyst on the stock. (After all, who would invest in a deal done b y an investment bank whose own in-house expert didn't believe in it?) Many analysts have taken this role a step further, seeking out potential deals in the areas they cover as aggressively as the investment bankers themselves.
As you might expect, analysts are making more money than ever. A generation ago, top analysts might pull down $250,000 a year; today, a highly regarded analyst might collect a salary of $2 million or more. (Weirdly, salaries are determined largely by w here analysts rate in a magazine survey--Institutional Investor's annual ranking as determined by a poll of the buy side.) Analysts can earn substantially more if they get a percentage of any investment banking deals they help bring in--as is the practice at some firms.
But something odd is going on here. As analysts have become real players on Wall Street, they no longer seem content to predict the movements of stocks they cover on the basis of a company's fundamental strengths and weaknesses. True, stocks ultimately rise and fall over the long term on the basis of those fundamentals. And yet there's no getting around it: Power now accrues to analysts who make stocks move, if only for a brief moment. Companies, for their part, work assiduously at diluting that power and preventing analysts from being able to move their shares. This tug of war is played out every day in the market--and the result is very often short-term stock fluctuations that have little if anything to do with a company's actual performance. A forme r Wall Street research director puts it succinctly: "If you were from Mars and you saw this system, you'd say it was wacko."
To understand how this psychological game is played, and how it shifts billions of dollars in and out of stocks every day, I spent most
October 27, 1997
Who Really Moves the Market, Part 1
Securities analysts are Wall Street's new stars: They bring in banking deals, make the calls that move billions in and out of stocks daily, and earn millions for themselves. They play a strange game with an odd set of rules. Here's how it works.
Joseph Nocera Reporter Associate: Amy Kover
Last Aug. 22 was an important day if you were an owner of Intel stock. A lazy, late summer Friday, it was the kind of day when half of Wall Street has already left for the weekend, when news is sparse and trading is thin. The kind of day, in other word s, when a securities analyst with a big reputation can knock the stuffing out of a stock with a ratings change.
Early that morning, several hours before the market opened, Thomas P. Kurlak, who follows semiconductor stocks for Merrill Lynch, got on the squawk box at his New York office and stunned the firm's sales force with an unexpected bit of news: He was do wngrading Intel from "strong buy" to "neutral." Merrill Lynch's legions of salesmen immediately began phoning the big institutional shareholders--mutual funds, hedge funds, pension funds, and the like--that have made Intel one of the h alf-dozen most important stocks of this raging bull market. For these institutions, collectively known as the "buy side," this was big: Kurlak was the dominant voice on Intel, and his rating changes always move the stock's price. Sure enough, ev en before the market opened that morning, Intel had dropped $7, to $91 a share.
Roll your cursor along the graph.
At the same time, on the other side of the country, Mark Edelstone was beginning his first day on the job in Morgan Stanley Dean Witter's San Francisco office. In his previous job as a semiconductor analyst at Prudential Securities, he had gained a fol lowing on Intel--so much so that Morgan Stanley had recruited him in the belief that he might one day challenge Kurlak as the "ax" on the stock. When he left Prudential two months before, he had a "neutral" rating on Intel.
That morning, Edelstone got on the squawk box too. Addressing Morgan Stanley's sales force, he unveiled his initial list of stock recommendations. He had Intel rated as an "outperform." Which meant, in effect, that he was upgrading the stock.
When word of Edelstone's Intel recommendation reached the Street, it had an electrifying effect. Though the timing of the calls was coincidental, the subtext was plain: Wall Street's two most prominent analysts on Intel were crossing swords, taking opp osing positions on the short-term prospects for the stock. When both men scheduled 10 A.M. conference calls with buy-side institutions, it was clear to everyone that Intel stockholders were in for a bruising day.
And what had Intel done to warrant all this attention? Nothing at all. There had been no new earnings projection, no big personnel change, no product announcement. These days, such things aren't necessary to move a stock. The howl of the analysts is su fficient.
The 1990s have become the Age of the Analyst on Wall Street. It is a startling turn of events: Not long ago securities analysts were the mole-like civil servants of the brokerage world. Their role was to produce lengthy, bone-dry reports on the strengt hs and weaknesses of publicly traded companies, which were mailed (mailed!) to clients. The work had nothing to do with the short-term movement of stock prices.
But with the cascade of money into the stock market over the past two decades, the requirements placed on securities analysts have changed completely. For shareholders large and small, this is no longer a buy-and-hold world; people want to know what a stock is going to do tomorrow. Predicting the short-term movement of a stock has become so central to an analyst's job description that an old-timer looking in on his colleagues today wouldn't even recognize the profession.
With this change has come a shift in the balance of power: Analysts have become the hubs around which much of Wall Street's profitmaking activities occur. For stockbrokers, analysts' recommendations are essential tools to persuade clients to buy or sel l stocks ("Our guy just downgraded Microsoft. You might want to think about lightening up.") For traders who handle major stock transactions, analysts generate millions of dollars in commissions. That's because buy-side institutions, by long-sta nding convention, reward the analysts they value by placing trades with the analysts' firms.
Finally, analysts have become vital to the business of investment banking. When a Wall Street firm wants to take a company public, for instance, it must have the endorsement of its own analyst on the stock. (After all, who would invest in a deal done b y an investment bank whose own in-house expert didn't believe in it?) Many analysts have taken this role a step further, seeking out potential deals in the areas they cover as aggressively as the investment bankers themselves.
As you might expect, analysts are making more money than ever. A generation ago, top analysts might pull down $250,000 a year; today, a highly regarded analyst might collect a salary of $2 million or more. (Weirdly, salaries are determined largely by w here analysts rate in a magazine survey--Institutional Investor's annual ranking as determined by a poll of the buy side.) Analysts can earn substantially more if they get a percentage of any investment banking deals they help bring in--as is the practice at some firms.
But something odd is going on here. As analysts have become real players on Wall Street, they no longer seem content to predict the movements of stocks they cover on the basis of a company's fundamental strengths and weaknesses. True, stocks ultimately rise and fall over the long term on the basis of those fundamentals. And yet there's no getting around it: Power now accrues to analysts who make stocks move, if only for a brief moment. Companies, for their part, work assiduously at diluting that power and preventing analysts from being able to move their shares. This tug of war is played out every day in the market--and the result is very often short-term stock fluctuations that have little if anything to do with a company's actual performance. A forme r Wall Street research director puts it succinctly: "If you were from Mars and you saw this system, you'd say it was wacko."
To understand how this psychological game is played, and how it shifts billions of dollars in and out of stocks every day, I spent most of last summer in the company of analysts who follow Intel. Intel may be the most widely followed company in the wor ld right now--Nelson's Information counts no fewer than 67 analysts who cover it. In turn, Intel employs a small army of spin doctors to pathfinder.com@@5tjoWgUAtyBYktSL/fortune/1997/971027/ana.html
See if you can get this and read all parts of this long article.
Jerry
of last summer in the company of analysts who follow Intel. Intel may be the most widely followed company in the wor ld right now--Nelson's Information counts no fewer than 67 analysts who cover it. In turn, Intel employs a small army of spin doctors to of 6 next |