CHAPTER 6 Greed Is Good, ’90s Style
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The market has seen its share of ups and downs over the decades, but the
rocket ride and dramatic downslide of the late 1990s was a perpetual
headline maker—another example of humankind’s historical prerogative to
get excited, especially as a group.
Manic booms shouldn’t be all that surprising. There are examples
throughout time, from the famed Tulip Bulb Mania in Holland in the 1630s
to the soaring U.S. stock market of the 1920s. The particular spurt that took
place in the United States during the last five years of the 20th century was
aided by the advent of a pervasive new technology, the Internet. Regardless
of years of study of tribal irrationality, however, everyone wanted in on the
party, the market was going up, and there was a massive disconnect between
reality and perception. The Internet became a platform of possibility for
every industrious innovator on the globe. Its uses seemed infinite, and in
1995 one of the leading upshots of this bountiful playing field, Netscape,
went public and doubled its value in its first day of trading.
A rash of IPOs followed, and initial public offerings briefly became an
inherent right of the Internet pioneer rather than the privileged platform to
capital they’d historically been. The share prices of new companies, many
with no profits, and most with significant losses, soared. Traditional valuations
were overlooked in favor of new-fangled metrics. Institutions, retail investors,
and day traders pumped up paper values, which took on more
meaning than tangible assets or real cash flow.
The market went nowhere but up, glamorizing companies with products that had hundreds of “eyeballs” but no profits, over companies with
steady cash flow, solid earnings growth, and experienced management. Even
value investors who relied on traditional valuation models such as priceearnings,
return on invested capital, or book value had a difficult time staying
on the sidelines of this gold rush. During this time, it seemed that IR took
on a qualitative role, more concerned about preserving unrealistic valuations
than with delivering an investment thesis based on underlying fundamentals.
However, when there are no fundamentals to refer to, the qualitative road
was the only one to take.
The strong economy created a perception of wealth and disposable income
that steered new investors to the market. These individuals were vulnerable
to the hype and weren’t familiar with the cyclical nature of the stock
market and its inherent risks. Nor did they seem familiar with the process of
analyzing companies. Dips in the market were seen as buying opportunities
rather than possible downward trends, and a heavy portion of assets were
allocated to tech stocks rather than to a diversified basket of established
companies.
Not only was technology the source of the excitement, but it was access
to the affair. Las Vegas meets your 401(k). The Dow passed 10,000, and
NASDAQ pushed through 5,000.
THE ROCKY FOUNDATION FOR ANALYSTS
The analyst’s role is to evaluate companies objectively. The Chinese Wall
that separates research from the investment bankers allows bankers to work
with privileged, highly confidential client information, and to keep that information
from leaking to research, sales, and trading. It became an odd
parallel, then, when analysts started to receive compensation for sourcing investment
banking transactions—in effect, breaking through the cornerstone
of investment banking integrity, the Chinese Wall.
These analysts, who worked closely with many companies and had the
power to make or break them with their research, started funneling those
companies toward their investment bankers to raise money. That was
the beginning of the gravy train, and analysts started asking more corporate
finance questions than questions leading them to a better understanding
of a company’s underlying fundamentals. Since investment banks can receive
fees between 3 percent and 7 percent of the total money raised for any
given deal, it’s no wonder banking became the primary focus: in most cases
it’s the investment bank’s biggest revenue generator. A mad dash to create
transactions took place.
Then a funny thing happened on the way to the investment bank. The
Buy, Hold, Sell recommendation system eroded even further. Suddenly, anything
other than a Buy had the potential to offend management and risk the
loss of investment banking business. Strong Buy, Buy, Outperform and Accumulate
were all examples of “investment banking ratings,” designed to
shed positive light on companies and massage the ego of many high-flying
(and not particularly capital markets–savvy) CEOs whose ego might not tolerate
a HOLD rating. The punchline to the joke, and the reality for almost
every investment professional on Wall Street, however, was that almost any
rating other than Strong Buy was considered a Sell. Though this practice is
beginning to shift back again, it still holds true today in many firms.
Analysts were less to blame for these conditions than upper management
at the investment banks, however. If analysts didn’t play along and recommend
potential or existing banking clients, they might position themselves
to be fired. At the very least, analysts who didn’t wave the flag ran
the risk of alienation by buy-side fund managers, potentially cutting off millions
in commission business for the investment bank. Finally, any rating
but a Buy in all likelihood put the analyst in the penalty box with management,
cutting off access and one’s ability to do the job. Sure the analysts
were to blame, but the entire system was broken, from the top down, not
just research.
MANAGEMENT’S MUDDLE
A few corporate senior managers also ran into problems as the markets
surged. Because stock options became a popular form of compensation,
there was too much emphasis on short-term stock performance. Though
many executives did not focus on this particular incentive, too many did.
These executives who made the daily stock price a factor in their strategic
business decision making, certainly made some bad ones.
Feeling the heat to meet short-term incentives, many executives set expectations
high for current performance, saw their stock prices increase,
and raised equity or sold personal positions. When these objectives were
out of reach, a meet-the-number mentality led to unethical accounting decisions
that prioritized short-term goals and the continuation of upward
momentum.
In a few cases, some of which are now well-known, this short-term
thinking wrought accounting frauds that ultimately cost employees and the
investing public millions. The transparency and integrity of corporate governance
came into question. Things had to change.
Greed Is Good, “90s Style 37
SNAPPING OUT OF IT
In an abrupt about-face, the market started to retreat and the boom that defined
the New Economy gave way, thankfully, to the old economy where
earnings and cash flow mattered. The market slid down the slippery slope of
a boom unraveling. The economy slowed, discretionary income dipped, and
suspicions about inflated valuations increased. Start-ups swirled toward
cash-constrained positions and established companies lost their pumped-up
values. Many Internet companies began to trade at a discount to the cash on
their balance sheet. 9/11 devastated the economy and morale, and the economy
petered into a major correction. As investors and companies adjusted
to the new market, issues in accounting and disclosure dominated the headlines.
The understanding that the system was broken was almost ubiquitous.
Prompted to action, the government stepped in.
“The major damage was not done by crooks. It was done by good
people , honest people , and decent people who I’d be happy to have as
trustees of my will. The CEOs in America basically drifted. They
drifted into situational ethics. It got out of hand.”—Warren Buffett,
March, 14, 2003, Forum for Corporate Conscience, referring to executive
pay and corporate accounting in the late 1990s.
The market has seen its share of ups and downs over the decades, but the
rocket ride and dramatic downslide of the late 1990s was a perpetual
headline maker—another example of humankind’s historical prerogative to
get excited, especially as a group.
Manic booms shouldn’t be all that surprising. There are examples
throughout time, from the famed Tulip Bulb Mania in Holland in the 1630s
to the soaring U.S. stock market of the 1920s. The particular spurt that took
place in the United States during the last five years of the 20th century was
aided by the advent of a pervasive new technology, the Internet. Regardless
of years of study of tribal irrationality, however, everyone wanted in on the
party, the market was going up, and there was a massive disconnect between
reality and perception. The Internet became a platform of possibility for
every industrious innovator on the globe. Its uses seemed infinite, and in
1995 one of the leading upshots of this bountiful playing field, Netscape,
went public and doubled its value in its first day of trading.
A rash of IPOs followed, and initial public offerings briefly became an
inherent right of the Internet pioneer rather than the privileged platform to
capital they’d historically been. The share prices of new companies, many
with no profits, and most with significant losses, soared. Traditional valuations
were overlooked in favor of new-fangled metrics. Institutions, retail investors,
and day traders pumped up paper values, which took on more
meaning than tangible assets or real cash flow.
The market went nowhere but up, glamorizing companies with products that had hundreds of “eyeballs” but no profits, over companies with
steady cash flow, solid earnings growth, and experienced management. Even
value investors who relied on traditional valuation models such as priceearnings,
return on invested capital, or book value had a difficult time staying
on the sidelines of this gold rush. During this time, it seemed that IR took
on a qualitative role, more concerned about preserving unrealistic valuations
than with delivering an investment thesis based on underlying fundamentals.
However, when there are no fundamentals to refer to, the qualitative road
was the only one to take.
The strong economy created a perception of wealth and disposable income
that steered new investors to the market. These individuals were vulnerable
to the hype and weren’t familiar with the cyclical nature of the stock
market and its inherent risks. Nor did they seem familiar with the process of
analyzing companies. Dips in the market were seen as buying opportunities
rather than possible downward trends, and a heavy portion of assets were
allocated to tech stocks rather than to a diversified basket of established
companies.
Not only was technology the source of the excitement, but it was access
to the affair. Las Vegas meets your 401(k). The Dow passed 10,000, and
NASDAQ pushed through 5,000.
THE ROCKY FOUNDATION FOR ANALYSTS
The analyst’s role is to evaluate companies objectively. The Chinese Wall
that separates research from the investment bankers allows bankers to work
with privileged, highly confidential client information, and to keep that information
from leaking to research, sales, and trading. It became an odd
parallel, then, when analysts started to receive compensation for sourcing investment
banking transactions—in effect, breaking through the cornerstone
of investment banking integrity, the Chinese Wall.
These analysts, who worked closely with many companies and had the
power to make or break them with their research, started funneling those
companies toward their investment bankers to raise money. That was
the beginning of the gravy train, and analysts started asking more corporate
finance questions than questions leading them to a better understanding
of a company’s underlying fundamentals. Since investment banks can receive
fees between 3 percent and 7 percent of the total money raised for any
given deal, it’s no wonder banking became the primary focus: in most cases
it’s the investment bank’s biggest revenue generator. A mad dash to create
transactions took place.
Then a funny thing happened on the way to the investment bank. The
Buy, Hold, Sell recommendation system eroded even further. Suddenly, anything
other than a Buy had the potential to offend management and risk the
loss of investment banking business. Strong Buy, Buy, Outperform and Accumulate
were all examples of “investment banking ratings,” designed to
shed positive light on companies and massage the ego of many high-flying
(and not particularly capital markets–savvy) CEOs whose ego might not tolerate
a HOLD rating. The punchline to the joke, and the reality for almost
every investment professional on Wall Street, however, was that almost any
rating other than Strong Buy was considered a Sell. Though this practice is
beginning to shift back again, it still holds true today in many firms.
Analysts were less to blame for these conditions than upper management
at the investment banks, however. If analysts didn’t play along and recommend
potential or existing banking clients, they might position themselves
to be fired. At the very least, analysts who didn’t wave the flag ran
the risk of alienation by buy-side fund managers, potentially cutting off millions
in commission business for the investment bank. Finally, any rating
but a Buy in all likelihood put the analyst in the penalty box with management,
cutting off access and one’s ability to do the job. Sure the analysts
were to blame, but the entire system was broken, from the top down, not
just research.
MANAGEMENT’S MUDDLE
A few corporate senior managers also ran into problems as the markets
surged. Because stock options became a popular form of compensation,
there was too much emphasis on short-term stock performance. Though
many executives did not focus on this particular incentive, too many did.
These executives who made the daily stock price a factor in their strategic
business decision making, certainly made some bad ones.
Feeling the heat to meet short-term incentives, many executives set expectations
high for current performance, saw their stock prices increase,
and raised equity or sold personal positions. When these objectives were
out of reach, a meet-the-number mentality led to unethical accounting decisions
that prioritized short-term goals and the continuation of upward
momentum.
In a few cases, some of which are now well-known, this short-term
thinking wrought accounting frauds that ultimately cost employees and the
investing public millions. The transparency and integrity of corporate governance
came into question. Things had to change.
Greed Is Good, “90s Style 37
SNAPPING OUT OF IT
In an abrupt about-face, the market started to retreat and the boom that defined
the New Economy gave way, thankfully, to the old economy where
earnings and cash flow mattered. The market slid down the slippery slope of
a boom unraveling. The economy slowed, discretionary income dipped, and
suspicions about inflated valuations increased. Start-ups swirled toward
cash-constrained positions and established companies lost their pumped-up
values. Many Internet companies began to trade at a discount to the cash on
their balance sheet. 9/11 devastated the economy and morale, and the economy
petered into a major correction. As investors and companies adjusted
to the new market, issues in accounting and disclosure dominated the headlines.
The understanding that the system was broken was almost ubiquitous.
Prompted to action, the government stepped in.
“The major damage was not done by crooks. It was done by good
people , honest people , and decent people who I’d be happy to have as
trustees of my will. The CEOs in America basically drifted. They
drifted into situational ethics. It got out of hand.”—Warren Buffett,
March, 14, 2003, Forum for Corporate Conscience, referring to executive
pay and corporate accounting in the late 1990s.