Kam-MoneyAM
- 01 Nov 2003 09:03
By Teletext
City analysts earn their living writing about companies, and helping investors make better-informed decisions about where to put their cash.
But their employers - investment banks and brokerages - sell services to these same companies. Can the analyst be objective when writing about a client?
The Financial Services Authority has set out measures to deal with potential conflicts of interest.
From next summer, banks and brokers publishing research on shares will have to spell out how they manage conflicts of interest, says the City regulator.
Their policies must comply with certain standards. This would include banning analysts from attending roadshows where his employer was marketing shares.
Firms failing to publish acceptable policies could not claim - or imply - that their research is objective.
Conflicts of interest for research analysts arise when their employers sell services to the companies being analysed. Investment banks might:
Act as adviser to companies making or considering an acquisition.
Act as adviser to a company floating its shares on the stock market for the first time, or selling bonds.
Lend money to companies.
Analysts writing research may face a conflict of interest if they hold shares in the companies they cover.
In 2001, US investment bank Merrill Lynch banned analysts from holding shares on companies they covered.
Not all firms agree. If an analyst has a "buy" rating on shares he owns, some say he is simply practising what we preaches. Others say he is trying to talk up the price of something he owns.
It is often difficult to prove that an analyst's views are biased.
In June, pub operator Mitchells and Butlers was set to be ejected from the FTSE 100 index of top UK companies. But a late "buy" note from Cazenove sent the shares soaring, keeping M&B in the top flight.
Cazenove supplies certain services to M&B as its house broker, but maintains this did not influence its research.
From next summer, firms that make "buy" and "sell" recommendations on company shares will be subject to stricter rules, says the City regulator. Those with conflicting responsibilities in the same firm will not be allowed to:
Supervise an analyst.
Decide on the content of Research.
Decide what an analyst gets paid.
Private investors could end up paying higher brokerage fees if research analysts can't cross-subsidise their work with other activities, says Hilary Cook at Barclays stockbrokers.
It's OK for the bigger houses, she adds. "They can afford to have separate research departments. But it's more difficult for smaller firms.
"Independence of analysts is all very well, but it comes at a cost."
ajren
- 01 Nov 2003 12:23
- 3 of 4
I agree - 100 PER CENT - with little woman.
I have read and analysed countless reports/analysis.
I lost 50,000 euros profit on Corus by agreeing with an S/P analysis-instead
of what I had done before i.e.adhering to my own analysis.
It was particularly distressing for me as I regularly watched the screen
and kept analysing it EVERY 10 MINUTES of many days for 10 HOURS a day.
My purchase at 8p was one of the greatest speculative risks taken by anyone
on any share over a year e.g.many City people were CERTAIN it was going into liquidation-it actually went up 700 per cent.Perhaps many people think I am
arrogant on these treads.However,specialising in High Risk/High Gain shares
means I HAVE to be right most of the time i.e.I can lose a vast amount of
money.Perhaps my language,at times,can be insensitive/blunt when I say a
share/company is terrible.However,chances are it is and I am merely trying
to be helpful to others as most of you have been very helpful to me about
shares I say I know NOTHING about e.g.Proteone sciences is an example where
I have got great info on from others.
The 50,000 euro profit was only the difference between buying at one price
and selling at another.However,had I also bought at highs and lows my total
profit loss - I made a good profit - would have been 80,000/120,000 euros.
I still read reports but I basically now listen to my own independent research.