CHAPTER 8 Post-Bubble Reality
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Although there were thousands of responsible CEOs and CFOs during the
late 1990s, responsibility and accountability were certainly suspended for
some executives during the market surge. After the pin prick, the market deflated,
the government stepped in, and the communications landscape became
even more complicated. Although companies, analysts, and investors
agreed that practices needed to be amended, many of the new rules
prompted confusion and some CEOs reacted by ceasing to interact with the
market altogether. Under these circumstances, analysts struggled to unearth
nuances from flat terrain, and the capital markets slipped into a rather awkward
mating dance between investment banks and companies.
Most of the new rules hinged on the nuances of materiality. For example,
a 245-unit restaurant chain that opened one new store did not necessarily
have material information to disclose. But if this store had a prototype
kitchen model that required less labor, and could dramatically improve unit
economics if successful, then that could be deemed as material—particularly
if a system-wide rollout was in the works that could dramatically expand
margins.
Because Reg FD says that every investor has the right to know anything
material at the same time and in the same way, there are a host of ways an
executive can inadvertently make a mistake.
For example, on November 5, 2001, the CEO of Siebel Systems, a software
systems provider, spoke about a company development at an invitation-
only technology conference. Apparently, the executive thought the information
was being Web cast, but it wasn’t. Regardless, after the stock
soared, the SEC levied a fine of $250,000.
The CFO of Raytheon was cited in February 2001 for the possibility
that he released guidance to select analysts shortly after providing no guidance
publicly. He resigned as a result.
Schering-Plough paid a huge fine of a $1,000,000, and the CEO paid a
personal fine of $50,000, after he may have relayed negativity about estimates—
not verbally, but through his body language. The SEC said he violated
Reg FD “through a combination of spoken language, tone, emphasis
and demeanor.” Reg FD underscores the importance of a uniform approach
to, and a template for, disclosure, created by IR along with management.
Similarly, with management legally accountable for every assumption,
note, debit, and credit, Sarbanes-Oxley forces an eagle’s eye on every corporate
step and process. Given the time and effort required, senior executives
often find themselves reluctant to risk divulging any information until
it’s been properly weighed and measured through all the checks and balances.
IR should support this responsibility by ensuring and facilitating this
process.
SELL-SIDE IMPLICATIONS
Post-bubble, investment banking business ground to a halt and the Chinese
Wall needed to be rebuilt. The more immediate problem, however, was saving
the overall business of investment banking, in the face of what seemed to
be wave after wave of downsizings and consolidations. Industry layoffs were
extensive, exceeding 50,000 workers. Subsequently, research budgets were
slashed, research coverage decreased, and market makers—the traders on
the NASDAQ who create liquidity in specific stocks by putting their own
capital at risk—dropped their support of thousands of companies. Ultimately,
many analysts left to work for the buy-side, investment banking, or
establish their own small research boutiques.
The remaining analysts saw a new environment that included a Big
Brother-esque shadow cast by New York Attorney General Elliot Spitzer,
whose prosecution of Wall Street firms led to many of the aforementioned
reforms. As The New York Times stated in an August 17, 2003, article entitled
“An Analyst’s Job Used to Be Fun. Not Anymore,” analysts went from
being the celebrities of Wall Street enjoying all the frills and perks of being lionized,
to overworked “Wall Street everyman, content with a gray life of financial
models and spreadsheets.”
The current crop of analysts are under increased pressure to analyze
companies and sell ideas to the buy-side within a rigid process that has materially
reduced the means by which incremental information can be extracted.
These analysts now also legally guarantee their opinion and are
under intense scrutiny to pick winners and losers with equal zeal. In many
cases, they’ve received significantly reduced pay packages for one of the
toughest jobs around.
Given this new world, where the wrong email or the wrong procedure
can end a career, it’s important to understand what kind of companies attract
sell-side analysts. They are looking, first of all, for an undervalued
company that’s a good stock pick. They are also looking for a company that
“fits” their investment bank. For example, if the investment bank is a small
regional player, they don’t want their analyst to be the twenty-second name
publishing a Buy rating on Disney. What possible incremental value could
they uncover given the fact that Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Bear
Stearns, and a parade of large firms are the first to have their Disney calls returned?
Instead, the small firm typically looks for an undervalued, underfollowed
stock that the entire firm—including sales, trading, and investment
banking—can get behind.
One of the biggest criteria, however, for any sell-side firm, either large or
small, is that the analyst must believe in management and its ability to manage
The Street. Analysts will only recommend companies whose executives
they trust, executives with a firm strategy in place and an understanding of
how The Street will react to that strategy.
BUY-SIDE
Investors are as equally reliant, and wary, of the relationships they build
with the CEOs. They have millions or billions of dollars to invest, and the
most recent taste in their mouth is either a CEO who fleeced the company
or an analyst who brought them an IPO that imploded. More than ever,
these fund managers need to know that they are dealing with credible executives
who commit to communicating their results transparently, in both
good and bad times. This is the first step to credibility or, perhaps, to rebuilding
credibility.
MANAGEMENT MUST LEAD
The stock market is incredibly efficient at discounting news, and it’s impossible
to keep either good or bad news locked up for an extended period of
time. If a company attempts to do so, the executive risks information leaks
and the capital markets uncovering the information in advance of its proper
release. This is a classic example of letting the outside world define an issue
rather than the company itself defining an issue.
Therefore, in good times and bad, companies do well to communicate
quickly, thereby positioning themselves to garner a higher valuation at any
Post-Bubble Reality 47
given time. Sitting on one’s hands, locking the door, running for cover . . .
these are not solid habits of an organization that wants to attract investors
or build a relationship with the media or Wall Street.
Though Reg FD and Sarbanes-Oxley have made some CEOs skittish,
any CEO who thinks it’s better to be quiet—when bad news arises—risks
losing credibility with the investment community and key stakeholders. The
market has a tendency to negatively react in the short run to a company with
bad news. However, the news would have come out eventually, and in reality
all companies are going to have bad news. Professional investors and analysts
expect it.
As difficult as it is to stand up and reveal problems and mistakes, the
very process of doing so can help a company build credibility and dilute the
consequence of that mistake. The Street admires the executive who stands
on the frontline, addresses the issue, and gives a plan for correction. Investors,
and all stakeholders, such as employees, like to hear one voice, one
story, and a logical equation of truth that justifies their dollars, time, and effort.
Staying quiet on bad news and then being forced to answer yes, no, or
no comment can destroy credibility and valuation, and may just land a CEO
in court. For example, if the market uncovers the news, which it will, 100
savvy investors will proceed to call the CEO and CFO. When management
returns those calls they’ll be asked to comment on the rumor, and that’s
where they’re stuck.
No comment means it’s probably true.
If the CEO acknowledges the rumor as true to a specific investor, Reg
FD has been violated.
If the company denies the rumor, lying to both analysts and portfolio
managers, the CEO’s credibility is destroyed.
CEOs must work with IR to manage the release of company news so
that the dissemination of information is always within their control. Often,
if a company’s business is challenging, the environment is also challenging
for its peers. Getting out first with bad news can be a positive for the stock
and for management’s reputation. It’s the difference of being proactive versus
reactive, the latter of which is always more difficult.
The rules have opportunity written all over them. Executives need to
share the facts, show who’s in charge, and take control. Most good executives
work past the tangle of traps that have insinuated themselves into the
capital markets and strive for a policy of prompt, effective, and appropriate
communication.
An effective IR program has to counsel that the message not only be
told, but heard and interpreted in the way it was intended. This starts with
an IR program that understands the rules and the environment, and how
these fit into the perennial thinking and behavior of all capital markets’ participants.
Although there were thousands of responsible CEOs and CFOs during the
late 1990s, responsibility and accountability were certainly suspended for
some executives during the market surge. After the pin prick, the market deflated,
the government stepped in, and the communications landscape became
even more complicated. Although companies, analysts, and investors
agreed that practices needed to be amended, many of the new rules
prompted confusion and some CEOs reacted by ceasing to interact with the
market altogether. Under these circumstances, analysts struggled to unearth
nuances from flat terrain, and the capital markets slipped into a rather awkward
mating dance between investment banks and companies.
Most of the new rules hinged on the nuances of materiality. For example,
a 245-unit restaurant chain that opened one new store did not necessarily
have material information to disclose. But if this store had a prototype
kitchen model that required less labor, and could dramatically improve unit
economics if successful, then that could be deemed as material—particularly
if a system-wide rollout was in the works that could dramatically expand
margins.
Because Reg FD says that every investor has the right to know anything
material at the same time and in the same way, there are a host of ways an
executive can inadvertently make a mistake.
For example, on November 5, 2001, the CEO of Siebel Systems, a software
systems provider, spoke about a company development at an invitation-
only technology conference. Apparently, the executive thought the information
was being Web cast, but it wasn’t. Regardless, after the stock
soared, the SEC levied a fine of $250,000.
The CFO of Raytheon was cited in February 2001 for the possibility
that he released guidance to select analysts shortly after providing no guidance
publicly. He resigned as a result.
Schering-Plough paid a huge fine of a $1,000,000, and the CEO paid a
personal fine of $50,000, after he may have relayed negativity about estimates—
not verbally, but through his body language. The SEC said he violated
Reg FD “through a combination of spoken language, tone, emphasis
and demeanor.” Reg FD underscores the importance of a uniform approach
to, and a template for, disclosure, created by IR along with management.
Similarly, with management legally accountable for every assumption,
note, debit, and credit, Sarbanes-Oxley forces an eagle’s eye on every corporate
step and process. Given the time and effort required, senior executives
often find themselves reluctant to risk divulging any information until
it’s been properly weighed and measured through all the checks and balances.
IR should support this responsibility by ensuring and facilitating this
process.
SELL-SIDE IMPLICATIONS
Post-bubble, investment banking business ground to a halt and the Chinese
Wall needed to be rebuilt. The more immediate problem, however, was saving
the overall business of investment banking, in the face of what seemed to
be wave after wave of downsizings and consolidations. Industry layoffs were
extensive, exceeding 50,000 workers. Subsequently, research budgets were
slashed, research coverage decreased, and market makers—the traders on
the NASDAQ who create liquidity in specific stocks by putting their own
capital at risk—dropped their support of thousands of companies. Ultimately,
many analysts left to work for the buy-side, investment banking, or
establish their own small research boutiques.
The remaining analysts saw a new environment that included a Big
Brother-esque shadow cast by New York Attorney General Elliot Spitzer,
whose prosecution of Wall Street firms led to many of the aforementioned
reforms. As The New York Times stated in an August 17, 2003, article entitled
“An Analyst’s Job Used to Be Fun. Not Anymore,” analysts went from
being the celebrities of Wall Street enjoying all the frills and perks of being lionized,
to overworked “Wall Street everyman, content with a gray life of financial
models and spreadsheets.”
The current crop of analysts are under increased pressure to analyze
companies and sell ideas to the buy-side within a rigid process that has materially
reduced the means by which incremental information can be extracted.
These analysts now also legally guarantee their opinion and are
under intense scrutiny to pick winners and losers with equal zeal. In many
cases, they’ve received significantly reduced pay packages for one of the
toughest jobs around.
Given this new world, where the wrong email or the wrong procedure
can end a career, it’s important to understand what kind of companies attract
sell-side analysts. They are looking, first of all, for an undervalued
company that’s a good stock pick. They are also looking for a company that
“fits” their investment bank. For example, if the investment bank is a small
regional player, they don’t want their analyst to be the twenty-second name
publishing a Buy rating on Disney. What possible incremental value could
they uncover given the fact that Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Bear
Stearns, and a parade of large firms are the first to have their Disney calls returned?
Instead, the small firm typically looks for an undervalued, underfollowed
stock that the entire firm—including sales, trading, and investment
banking—can get behind.
One of the biggest criteria, however, for any sell-side firm, either large or
small, is that the analyst must believe in management and its ability to manage
The Street. Analysts will only recommend companies whose executives
they trust, executives with a firm strategy in place and an understanding of
how The Street will react to that strategy.
BUY-SIDE
Investors are as equally reliant, and wary, of the relationships they build
with the CEOs. They have millions or billions of dollars to invest, and the
most recent taste in their mouth is either a CEO who fleeced the company
or an analyst who brought them an IPO that imploded. More than ever,
these fund managers need to know that they are dealing with credible executives
who commit to communicating their results transparently, in both
good and bad times. This is the first step to credibility or, perhaps, to rebuilding
credibility.
MANAGEMENT MUST LEAD
The stock market is incredibly efficient at discounting news, and it’s impossible
to keep either good or bad news locked up for an extended period of
time. If a company attempts to do so, the executive risks information leaks
and the capital markets uncovering the information in advance of its proper
release. This is a classic example of letting the outside world define an issue
rather than the company itself defining an issue.
Therefore, in good times and bad, companies do well to communicate
quickly, thereby positioning themselves to garner a higher valuation at any
Post-Bubble Reality 47
given time. Sitting on one’s hands, locking the door, running for cover . . .
these are not solid habits of an organization that wants to attract investors
or build a relationship with the media or Wall Street.
Though Reg FD and Sarbanes-Oxley have made some CEOs skittish,
any CEO who thinks it’s better to be quiet—when bad news arises—risks
losing credibility with the investment community and key stakeholders. The
market has a tendency to negatively react in the short run to a company with
bad news. However, the news would have come out eventually, and in reality
all companies are going to have bad news. Professional investors and analysts
expect it.
As difficult as it is to stand up and reveal problems and mistakes, the
very process of doing so can help a company build credibility and dilute the
consequence of that mistake. The Street admires the executive who stands
on the frontline, addresses the issue, and gives a plan for correction. Investors,
and all stakeholders, such as employees, like to hear one voice, one
story, and a logical equation of truth that justifies their dollars, time, and effort.
Staying quiet on bad news and then being forced to answer yes, no, or
no comment can destroy credibility and valuation, and may just land a CEO
in court. For example, if the market uncovers the news, which it will, 100
savvy investors will proceed to call the CEO and CFO. When management
returns those calls they’ll be asked to comment on the rumor, and that’s
where they’re stuck.
No comment means it’s probably true.
If the CEO acknowledges the rumor as true to a specific investor, Reg
FD has been violated.
If the company denies the rumor, lying to both analysts and portfolio
managers, the CEO’s credibility is destroyed.
CEOs must work with IR to manage the release of company news so
that the dissemination of information is always within their control. Often,
if a company’s business is challenging, the environment is also challenging
for its peers. Getting out first with bad news can be a positive for the stock
and for management’s reputation. It’s the difference of being proactive versus
reactive, the latter of which is always more difficult.
The rules have opportunity written all over them. Executives need to
share the facts, show who’s in charge, and take control. Most good executives
work past the tangle of traps that have insinuated themselves into the
capital markets and strive for a policy of prompt, effective, and appropriate
communication.
An effective IR program has to counsel that the message not only be
told, but heard and interpreted in the way it was intended. This starts with
an IR program that understands the rules and the environment, and how
these fit into the perennial thinking and behavior of all capital markets’ participants.