CHAPTER 10 Traditional IR: What It Is, and Why It’s Not Enough
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All public companies must adhere to numerous requirements in terms of
communicating with investors. These include filings that the Securities
and Exchange Commission requires to level the playing field for all investors.
SEC filings are the raw materials of IR, and what one does with
them can determine the success of financial communications.
Of course, on the one hand, a company that did nothing more than file
10-Ks and 10-Qs would be utterly uninteresting to institutions and probably
never develop a strong public company multiple. On the other hand, if a
company goes out of its way to explain these rather dry documents and
makes the effort to target and court the right investors at the right time, the
success can raise the visibility of the organization and increase the company’s
overall value.
Let’s start at the beginning, however, and review the basics.
THE ESSENTIALS: PUBLIC FILINGS AND MEETINGS
The following list shows the absolutes that every public company must file
with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the procedural notices
and meetings that are a part of all public company interaction with investors.
The schedules of these reports and notices are based on a fiscal, as
opposed to a calendar, year.
Annual reports
Proxies
10-Ks
10-Qs
SEC Disclosures
Annual meeting
Annual report: An end-of-the-fiscal-year report to investors that includes
communication from the CEO and a basic summary of business,
including text on operations, tables of audited GAAP (Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles) financials (income statement, cash flows, balance
sheets), and the notes explaining the assumptions behind those numbers.
This is an easier-to-digest, graphically designed, variation on the 10-K.
The bigger, more extensive annual reports with pages of products and
strategy are becoming less relevant in today’s world. They are usually the
domain of larger companies that use their annual report to market their
business. We tend to recommend the 10-K Wrap, a two- or three-page
fold-out that wraps around the 10-K. This approach makes sense for costconscious
firms because the difference between a 10-K Wrap and a fullblown,
designed, and distributed annual report can be tens of thousands
of dollars.
Proxy: The proxy is a document that contains vital information on current
company issues to be discussed at the annual meeting. These usually include
elections for the board of directors, ratification of independent accountants,
company plans, and shareholder proposals. Shareholders who
cannot attend the open meeting cast their votes by proxy by signing and
sending in the proxy’s voting card. The proxy document also lists up-to-date
information on beneficial and insider stock and options ownership.
10-K: An end-of-the-fiscal year report to the SEC that summarizes that
year’s business and financial activities, the 10-K is more extensive than the
annual report.
10-Q: A summary filed with the SEC each quarter of the fiscal year, reporting
the last three months and year-to-date operations.
MD&A: The Management’s Discussion and Analysis is a key, required
section of the 10-K and 10-Q filings.
SEC Disclosures: Required documents filed with the SEC any time a
significant event has occurred. These include 8-Ks, to report unscheduled,
time-sensitive, material events, such as a merger or a change in board of directors.
For private companies or spin-offs of divisions, SEC disclosures include
S-1s, which are registration statements/filings that announce an initial
public offering.
Annual meeting: The company’s once-a-year meeting to which all
shareholders are invited. Some companies have more than one to accommodate
the geographical distribution and number of their shareholders. Management
and the directors present and discuss recent issues and decisions, answer shareholders’ questions, and put company plans and shareholder
proposals, pre-announced by proxy, up to vote.
THE ESSENTIALS: DELIVERY VEHICLES
The absolutes are delivered, or can be made accessible, to investors in many
ways, including:
The SEC
Direct mail
The media
The Internet
Conference calls
The SEC: By filing with the SEC, companies automatically make their
disclosures accessible and available to the public. Created in 1984 to ease
paper flow and to hurdle microfiche hassles, the government’s Electronic
Data Gathering Analysis and Retrieval System, EDGAR, collects, validates,
and stores SEC-required public disclosures. Since 1996 all public companies
have been required to file disclosures electronically, and these forms are
made available to the public on the SEC Web site. Increasingly, SEC Web
links are found directly on the IR portion of most company Web sites, creating
even easier access to both institutional and retail investors.
Direct mail: Public companies are required to mail the annual report
and proxy to all of their investors. This expense can be substantial for even
the smallest of companies. More and more companies make annual reports
and proxies, current and past, available on their Web sites. With the permission
of their investors, many companies are transferring the delivery of disclosures
and news from traditional mail to the more immediate and costefficient
email and electronic distribution. As stated earlier, the savings can
be material, anywhere from $20,000 to $50,000 for smaller companies. All
that said, many companies still mail press releases and other materials to investors,
a practice that is becoming less and less common.
The media: In order to stay in compliance with Reg FD, companies
must share material information with all investors promptly and simultaneously.
To do this, companies should issue quarterly earnings releases and
press releases describing SEC disclosure highlights and other significant
company events. Common sense, however, dictates that these disclosures
should be disseminated to a wider audience that includes media, trade publications,
buy-side organizations, and sell-side firms. IR should develop a
Traditional IR: What It Is, and Why It’s Not Enough 63
standard press release format in combination with investor targeting mechanisms
to garner optimal reach and frequency. IR should also make sure
that the message and investment highlights are clear and focus on key capital
markets triggers.
The Internet: Company Web sites, as well as the Web sites of agencies
that provide investors with public company information, are good platforms
for the communication of essential disclosures. User-friendly investor relations
pages can provide current and potential investors with current and historical
annual reports, proxies, press releases, 10-Ks, 10-Qs, and other SEC
disclosures. Email alerts are also an efficient way to reach investors in an
even and timely manner. Beefing up these capabilities not only saves money
on dissemination, but it’s also legally required.
Conference calls: An effective and the most common way to draw investor
and analyst attention to recent company disclosures, the conference
call allows capital markets players to listen to senior management summarize
recent disclosures, highlights, and significant activities, as well as ask
questions. We believe that a script for these calls is essential and should
never be sacrificed for bullet points or off-the-cuff explanations of relevant
facts. This is due to Reg FD as well as the quest to control the information
that the buy- and sell-side are digesting. Because these calls are highly scrutinized,
the script functions as a template for disclosure for the upcoming
quarter, by providing a framework for materiality, and mitigating the possibility
of an intra-quarter Reg FD slipup. For example, if management receives
a call from a 10 percent investor during the quarter, they can always
reference prepared remarks from the latest script, rather than inadvertently
disseminate new information.
The conference call is also management’s opportunity to define its company
rather than wait for the analyst to do so in writing. Accordingly, the
best way to create that definition is a well-thought-out script that leaves
nothing to analyst interpretation. This tack gives buy-siders a welcome
check and balance to sell-side research as they can go directly to the source,
the transcribed conference call transcript, and get a solid understanding of
management’s vision. Knowing this, management should never be unprepared
for this critical touch point with the institutional community.
ADDITIONAL IR TOOLS AND VEHICLES
Investors expect public companies to go beyond the SEC requirements of annual
reports, 10-Ks, 10-Qs, proxies, and SEC disclosures and provide as much information as possible to fully relay the company story. Additionally,
strategic partners and employees sometimes expect to receive, or have access
to, a steady flow of information. Supplementary information could include
the following:
Newsletters
Conferences
Road shows
One-on-Ones
Analyst days
Ads/Publicity
Web sites
Newsletters: Periodic newsletters to employees, partners, and investors
are a good way to keep stakeholders informed and capture the attention of
key constituencies. Interviews with executives and key management, insights
into operations, announcements of product or service initiatives, technology
or research advancements, consumer trends, industry updates, marketing
concepts, and any other information that helps investors and strategic partners
stay informed should be included.
Other forms of interim communication include fact sheets, sent out
quarterly, that summarize the most recent company developments and financial
performance. Large companies sometimes provide the sell- and buyside
with fact books, or supplemental disclosure forms, which literally have
reams of data on the finer details of complex operations.
Although helpful to investors, these supplemental materials are most effective
when disseminated consistently, no matter how the company performed.
Companies that only do so when times are good and suspend information
sharing when times are bad risk their reputation and company
credibility, both drivers of equity valuation over time.
Conferences: Companies can sponsor, or participate in, conferences for
companies and customers in their industry. It creates an opportunity for senior
management to present a viewpoint through speeches, panels, or discussion
groups and a platform for product sampling or exposure of services. It
is best for Reg FD purposes to have such presentations Web cast to avoid unintentional
selective disclosure.
Road shows: This is an effective way for management to tell its story directly
to investors. Sometimes called Non-Deal Road Shows, because companies
aren’t raising capital at the time, these are presentations where management
travels to the offices of buy-side and sometimes sell-side analysts to
Traditional IR: What It Is, and Why It’s Not Enough 65
discuss the financial and strategic prospects for the company. The hope is to
generate interest so the buy-side will buy and the sell-side will publish. These
meetings also serve to establish and build personal relationships. Having the
sell-side involved in coordinating these events is a good move, as it is a
source of their compensation and can provide for active sales and trading
support in conjunction with the meeting. The IR team should coordinate the
process and potentially augment the schedule of meetings so it’s done as efficiently
as possible with maximum impact. However, it should be ultimately
executed by the sell-side, not the investor relations agency.
One-on-Ones: Although Reg FD keeps everyone on their toes, one-onone
meetings between management and analysts or fund managers, either at
conferences or on road shows, are still a productive way for investors to find
the answers they need while giving management a chance to share their story
directly.
Analyst days: Many companies find it helpful to bring analysts to company
headquarters to hear the story, see the product, and most importantly,
meet some of the other management outside of the CEO and CFO, with
whom they typically interact.
Advertising and publicity: Broadcast and cable television, radio, magazines,
newspapers, and trade publications are good resources for reaching a
wide segment of potential investors and stakeholders. Relaying the corporate
mission to a wide audience can help build awareness and name recognition
that will bolster investor interest. Through publicity, companies can
draw attention in media articles and news stories, and present management
as interview candidates for business and news programs. In advertising,
companies can showcase their corporate message, products, services, customer
satisfaction, trade awards, or financial performance.
Web sites: The Internet is as pervasive as the media, but much more immediate
and flexible, making a corporate and/or brand Web site an excellent
way to communicate with all stakeholders. Most corporate sites have specific
pages where the employees, suppliers, vendors, customers, consumers,
and investors can connect and collect pertinent information. The pages for
investors, a specific investor relations area, should include
Daily stock quotes
Dividend announcements
Earnings releases
Stock performance graphs
Current and historical financial performance
Company history and background
Web casts of presentations and conference calls
Archives of annual reports, SEC disclosures, and media releases
Answers to frequently asked questions
New product demos or factory tours interactive chats
Language access for global investors
Also on the investor relations pages should be information about administrative
functions, such as
Stock transfer agents
Dividend reinvestment programs
Employee stock services
Shareholder stock purchase programs
Subscriber services
Company investment plans
IR contact information
The following items are optional and should be included on the investor
relations pages if appropriate:
Fact sheets and books
Newsletters
Information on governance issues, such as lists of board of directors,
committees, charters, policies, guidelines, by-laws, and accountability
initiatives
Companies should also consider creating links to their Web site from related
sites and third-party Web sites that provide data to potential investors.
OTHER BASIC IR PRACTICES
Obviously, basic IR has a lot of administrative tasks that need to be conquered,
such as overseeing the preparation and distribution of disclosures
and organizing conferences, presentations, and meetings. But, of course,
even with these basic IR functions, simply sending out information and providing
access to facts and figures does not compose a world-class IR program.
Most IR professionals will tell you that that is just the beginning. In
addition to the above tools and vehicles, IR professionals must engage in the
following activities:
Traditional IR: What It Is, and Why It’s Not Enough 67
Stock Market Reconnaissance
IR’s job is to keep an eye on the stock market and understand valuation. IR
must follow general economic indicators, industry-specific indicators, and
stock-specific issues. Stock price and stock volume, as well as specific ratios
such as P/E or EV/EBITDA relative to industry competitors, help management
understand market perception of the industry, the competition, and
their own company’s performance.
Shareholder Analysis
The makeup of institutional ownership and percentage of institutional ownership
relative to the whole is an indicator of a company’s image in the eyes
of the capital markets. Large holdings by institutions, involvement by shortsellers,
or a high degree of retail or mom-and-pop ownership indicate the
kind of holders or nonholders a stock might have. Tracking investors, the
amount of ownership, and movement can keep a company ahead of the
market currents and help the company target the investors it wants in a costeffective
manner. Knowing who your investors are, how much money they
manage, what their investment style is, and what comparable stocks they
own is essential information.
Approaching Analysts
Equity research coverage is still one of the best ways to create exposure and
gain credibility. Analysts are quoted by the media, referenced by investors,
and queried by their own brokers and traders. The potential endorsement of
coverage, and the realistic setting of earnings estimates, can lead to wider
distribution of equity, greater liquidity, less volatility, and a better multiple
for the stock.
Feedback
IR should constantly survey the capital markets to understand the attitudes
of the sell-side and the buy-side toward the company. Not understanding
perception before approaching a release or conference call is like distributing
product on gut instinct. Much like a consumer products company would
understand the market or customer before introducing an extension, IR
should understand market issues before communicating with investors. At
the end of the day, publicly traded companies are “product” to the buy- and
sell-sides, and the exercise of shareholder communication should be approached
as a marketing function to a degree.
RESOURCES FOR TRADITIONAL IR
Many good books on investor relations explain the requirements and resources
for providing the traditional IR function to investors. These books
include Investor Relations for the Emerging Company, by Ralph A. Rieves
and John Lefebvre; New Dimensions in Investor Relations, by Bruce W.
Marcus and Sherwood Lee Wallace; and Best Practices in Global Investor
Relations, by Richard B. Higgins.
These texts provide clear explanations of the IR necessities. Additionally,
many Web sites and associations provide IR information. Other critical
resources include the National Investor Relations Institute’s Web site,
NIRI.Org, and IR Magazine’s IRontheNet.Com.
REVAMPED, RAMPED UP, AND REDEFINED
Traditional IR is not enough, however. We believe it is not only about delivering
the basics, but also wrapping them in the context of valuation at any
given time. For people who sit on the sell-side and buy-side, it often seems
that companies don’t understand what they need. Rather, companies tend to
present a one-dimensional portrait.
Senior management knows the story inside and out. After all, they run
the companies. However, a large number of management teams don’t really
know how to package their story for institutional buyers or sell-side analysts.
It’s unfortunate because, if a company is packaged properly, analysts
just might take a chance on publishing or portfolio managers might begin to
accumulate a long position. In sum, the channels and methods by which
management communicates to Wall Street and Wall Street communicates to
the companies should not be underestimated. Done right, the process is simply
not as easy as many companies think.
Being on the inside with companies teaches that it takes more than traditional
IR to build or preserve value. Though going beyond the required
and voluntary disclosure of information, traditional IR can sometimes still
fall short. Unless IR operates from a capital markets perspective, understanding
the thoughts and processes of the sell-side and the buy-side, there
will always be room for improvement.
Consider these cases in point:
Missteps in Stock Market Reconnaissance
The stock market is a funny thing, and like a pot to boil, it’s best not to
watch it too closely. Companies that cross the fine line between noncha-
Traditional IR: What It Is, and Why It’s Not Enough 69
lance and obsessing over short-term stock movements can make rash decisions
to try and purge their short-sellers or have careless delays when dealing
with sizable institutional investors. Achieving that balance takes capital
markets know-how. For example, it’s best for management to not talk valuation
with analysts and portfolio managers. After all, they are the professionals.
Rather, management should get counsel from IR that understands
all of the implications and consequences of any market moves.
Missteps in Shareholder Analysis
IR that monitors share price to gauge market perception is somewhat behind
the curve. Although important, stock price movement is the tail wagging
the dog to a degree, and IR must know the likely impact of a company
decision before the shareholders render their judgment in the form of buying
or selling.
Missteps in Approaching Analysts
Having a handle on analysts’ estimates and the consensus estimate helps a
company stay in control of its story and engage The Street as an active, participatory
voice. But analysts are not just smart, calculating evaluators, they
are human beings who rely heavily on trust to devise those estimates and
recommendations. Not just any approach will do. Management must control
this process, as it can be a significant part of building valuation and raising
capital.
The public establishment of estimates by a company to The Street,
guidance, is perhaps one of the most essential practices of IR that this book
covers. One of the biggest missteps we’ve seen in the relationships that
companies have with the investment community is when they decide not to
give guidance. This inaction stems from a management view that if they
don’t give guidance, they won’t be measured against the numbers. The reality
is that analysts must make projections with or without guidance from
the companies, so companies are losing control of a number that will exist
anyway. Effective IR should always counsel management to take control of
that process.
Missteps in Obtaining Feedback
Though management might think they are getting clear feedback from analyst
conversations, they may not recognize that the sell-side and buy-side
rarely say anything to jeopardize access to management. That’s because access leads to information, which is the currency of Wall Street. It enables
both analysts and portfolio managers to either generate commissions, invest
safely, or avoid an investment altogether. Therefore, because someone’s living
is at stake, Wall Street pros are wary of giving honest (negative) feedback,
particularly to an emotional CEO or CFO.
This is the classic “Emperor Has No Clothes” scenario, where market
feedback is filtered to the company, even though it’s no-holds-barred between
analysts and investors. CEOs unwilling to take constructive criticism
because they think it’s personal are ultimately not conducting themselves in
the best interest of shareholders.
A BETTER APPROACH
IR with a capital markets background guards against many of these missteps.
Companies that engage in more strategic IR know how to communicate
better with the buy-side and the sell-side and materially improve
chances of coverage and institutional ownership. Done right, this method
and knowledge can lead to more optimal media coverage, better company
morale, and many other benefits that all increase the value of the company.
All public companies must adhere to numerous requirements in terms of
communicating with investors. These include filings that the Securities
and Exchange Commission requires to level the playing field for all investors.
SEC filings are the raw materials of IR, and what one does with
them can determine the success of financial communications.
Of course, on the one hand, a company that did nothing more than file
10-Ks and 10-Qs would be utterly uninteresting to institutions and probably
never develop a strong public company multiple. On the other hand, if a
company goes out of its way to explain these rather dry documents and
makes the effort to target and court the right investors at the right time, the
success can raise the visibility of the organization and increase the company’s
overall value.
Let’s start at the beginning, however, and review the basics.
THE ESSENTIALS: PUBLIC FILINGS AND MEETINGS
The following list shows the absolutes that every public company must file
with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the procedural notices
and meetings that are a part of all public company interaction with investors.
The schedules of these reports and notices are based on a fiscal, as
opposed to a calendar, year.
Annual reports
Proxies
10-Ks
10-Qs
SEC Disclosures
Annual meeting
Annual report: An end-of-the-fiscal-year report to investors that includes
communication from the CEO and a basic summary of business,
including text on operations, tables of audited GAAP (Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles) financials (income statement, cash flows, balance
sheets), and the notes explaining the assumptions behind those numbers.
This is an easier-to-digest, graphically designed, variation on the 10-K.
The bigger, more extensive annual reports with pages of products and
strategy are becoming less relevant in today’s world. They are usually the
domain of larger companies that use their annual report to market their
business. We tend to recommend the 10-K Wrap, a two- or three-page
fold-out that wraps around the 10-K. This approach makes sense for costconscious
firms because the difference between a 10-K Wrap and a fullblown,
designed, and distributed annual report can be tens of thousands
of dollars.
Proxy: The proxy is a document that contains vital information on current
company issues to be discussed at the annual meeting. These usually include
elections for the board of directors, ratification of independent accountants,
company plans, and shareholder proposals. Shareholders who
cannot attend the open meeting cast their votes by proxy by signing and
sending in the proxy’s voting card. The proxy document also lists up-to-date
information on beneficial and insider stock and options ownership.
10-K: An end-of-the-fiscal year report to the SEC that summarizes that
year’s business and financial activities, the 10-K is more extensive than the
annual report.
10-Q: A summary filed with the SEC each quarter of the fiscal year, reporting
the last three months and year-to-date operations.
MD&A: The Management’s Discussion and Analysis is a key, required
section of the 10-K and 10-Q filings.
SEC Disclosures: Required documents filed with the SEC any time a
significant event has occurred. These include 8-Ks, to report unscheduled,
time-sensitive, material events, such as a merger or a change in board of directors.
For private companies or spin-offs of divisions, SEC disclosures include
S-1s, which are registration statements/filings that announce an initial
public offering.
Annual meeting: The company’s once-a-year meeting to which all
shareholders are invited. Some companies have more than one to accommodate
the geographical distribution and number of their shareholders. Management
and the directors present and discuss recent issues and decisions, answer shareholders’ questions, and put company plans and shareholder
proposals, pre-announced by proxy, up to vote.
THE ESSENTIALS: DELIVERY VEHICLES
The absolutes are delivered, or can be made accessible, to investors in many
ways, including:
The SEC
Direct mail
The media
The Internet
Conference calls
The SEC: By filing with the SEC, companies automatically make their
disclosures accessible and available to the public. Created in 1984 to ease
paper flow and to hurdle microfiche hassles, the government’s Electronic
Data Gathering Analysis and Retrieval System, EDGAR, collects, validates,
and stores SEC-required public disclosures. Since 1996 all public companies
have been required to file disclosures electronically, and these forms are
made available to the public on the SEC Web site. Increasingly, SEC Web
links are found directly on the IR portion of most company Web sites, creating
even easier access to both institutional and retail investors.
Direct mail: Public companies are required to mail the annual report
and proxy to all of their investors. This expense can be substantial for even
the smallest of companies. More and more companies make annual reports
and proxies, current and past, available on their Web sites. With the permission
of their investors, many companies are transferring the delivery of disclosures
and news from traditional mail to the more immediate and costefficient
email and electronic distribution. As stated earlier, the savings can
be material, anywhere from $20,000 to $50,000 for smaller companies. All
that said, many companies still mail press releases and other materials to investors,
a practice that is becoming less and less common.
The media: In order to stay in compliance with Reg FD, companies
must share material information with all investors promptly and simultaneously.
To do this, companies should issue quarterly earnings releases and
press releases describing SEC disclosure highlights and other significant
company events. Common sense, however, dictates that these disclosures
should be disseminated to a wider audience that includes media, trade publications,
buy-side organizations, and sell-side firms. IR should develop a
Traditional IR: What It Is, and Why It’s Not Enough 63
standard press release format in combination with investor targeting mechanisms
to garner optimal reach and frequency. IR should also make sure
that the message and investment highlights are clear and focus on key capital
markets triggers.
The Internet: Company Web sites, as well as the Web sites of agencies
that provide investors with public company information, are good platforms
for the communication of essential disclosures. User-friendly investor relations
pages can provide current and potential investors with current and historical
annual reports, proxies, press releases, 10-Ks, 10-Qs, and other SEC
disclosures. Email alerts are also an efficient way to reach investors in an
even and timely manner. Beefing up these capabilities not only saves money
on dissemination, but it’s also legally required.
Conference calls: An effective and the most common way to draw investor
and analyst attention to recent company disclosures, the conference
call allows capital markets players to listen to senior management summarize
recent disclosures, highlights, and significant activities, as well as ask
questions. We believe that a script for these calls is essential and should
never be sacrificed for bullet points or off-the-cuff explanations of relevant
facts. This is due to Reg FD as well as the quest to control the information
that the buy- and sell-side are digesting. Because these calls are highly scrutinized,
the script functions as a template for disclosure for the upcoming
quarter, by providing a framework for materiality, and mitigating the possibility
of an intra-quarter Reg FD slipup. For example, if management receives
a call from a 10 percent investor during the quarter, they can always
reference prepared remarks from the latest script, rather than inadvertently
disseminate new information.
The conference call is also management’s opportunity to define its company
rather than wait for the analyst to do so in writing. Accordingly, the
best way to create that definition is a well-thought-out script that leaves
nothing to analyst interpretation. This tack gives buy-siders a welcome
check and balance to sell-side research as they can go directly to the source,
the transcribed conference call transcript, and get a solid understanding of
management’s vision. Knowing this, management should never be unprepared
for this critical touch point with the institutional community.
ADDITIONAL IR TOOLS AND VEHICLES
Investors expect public companies to go beyond the SEC requirements of annual
reports, 10-Ks, 10-Qs, proxies, and SEC disclosures and provide as much information as possible to fully relay the company story. Additionally,
strategic partners and employees sometimes expect to receive, or have access
to, a steady flow of information. Supplementary information could include
the following:
Newsletters
Conferences
Road shows
One-on-Ones
Analyst days
Ads/Publicity
Web sites
Newsletters: Periodic newsletters to employees, partners, and investors
are a good way to keep stakeholders informed and capture the attention of
key constituencies. Interviews with executives and key management, insights
into operations, announcements of product or service initiatives, technology
or research advancements, consumer trends, industry updates, marketing
concepts, and any other information that helps investors and strategic partners
stay informed should be included.
Other forms of interim communication include fact sheets, sent out
quarterly, that summarize the most recent company developments and financial
performance. Large companies sometimes provide the sell- and buyside
with fact books, or supplemental disclosure forms, which literally have
reams of data on the finer details of complex operations.
Although helpful to investors, these supplemental materials are most effective
when disseminated consistently, no matter how the company performed.
Companies that only do so when times are good and suspend information
sharing when times are bad risk their reputation and company
credibility, both drivers of equity valuation over time.
Conferences: Companies can sponsor, or participate in, conferences for
companies and customers in their industry. It creates an opportunity for senior
management to present a viewpoint through speeches, panels, or discussion
groups and a platform for product sampling or exposure of services. It
is best for Reg FD purposes to have such presentations Web cast to avoid unintentional
selective disclosure.
Road shows: This is an effective way for management to tell its story directly
to investors. Sometimes called Non-Deal Road Shows, because companies
aren’t raising capital at the time, these are presentations where management
travels to the offices of buy-side and sometimes sell-side analysts to
Traditional IR: What It Is, and Why It’s Not Enough 65
discuss the financial and strategic prospects for the company. The hope is to
generate interest so the buy-side will buy and the sell-side will publish. These
meetings also serve to establish and build personal relationships. Having the
sell-side involved in coordinating these events is a good move, as it is a
source of their compensation and can provide for active sales and trading
support in conjunction with the meeting. The IR team should coordinate the
process and potentially augment the schedule of meetings so it’s done as efficiently
as possible with maximum impact. However, it should be ultimately
executed by the sell-side, not the investor relations agency.
One-on-Ones: Although Reg FD keeps everyone on their toes, one-onone
meetings between management and analysts or fund managers, either at
conferences or on road shows, are still a productive way for investors to find
the answers they need while giving management a chance to share their story
directly.
Analyst days: Many companies find it helpful to bring analysts to company
headquarters to hear the story, see the product, and most importantly,
meet some of the other management outside of the CEO and CFO, with
whom they typically interact.
Advertising and publicity: Broadcast and cable television, radio, magazines,
newspapers, and trade publications are good resources for reaching a
wide segment of potential investors and stakeholders. Relaying the corporate
mission to a wide audience can help build awareness and name recognition
that will bolster investor interest. Through publicity, companies can
draw attention in media articles and news stories, and present management
as interview candidates for business and news programs. In advertising,
companies can showcase their corporate message, products, services, customer
satisfaction, trade awards, or financial performance.
Web sites: The Internet is as pervasive as the media, but much more immediate
and flexible, making a corporate and/or brand Web site an excellent
way to communicate with all stakeholders. Most corporate sites have specific
pages where the employees, suppliers, vendors, customers, consumers,
and investors can connect and collect pertinent information. The pages for
investors, a specific investor relations area, should include
Daily stock quotes
Dividend announcements
Earnings releases
Stock performance graphs
Current and historical financial performance
Company history and background
Web casts of presentations and conference calls
Archives of annual reports, SEC disclosures, and media releases
Answers to frequently asked questions
New product demos or factory tours interactive chats
Language access for global investors
Also on the investor relations pages should be information about administrative
functions, such as
Stock transfer agents
Dividend reinvestment programs
Employee stock services
Shareholder stock purchase programs
Subscriber services
Company investment plans
IR contact information
The following items are optional and should be included on the investor
relations pages if appropriate:
Fact sheets and books
Newsletters
Information on governance issues, such as lists of board of directors,
committees, charters, policies, guidelines, by-laws, and accountability
initiatives
Companies should also consider creating links to their Web site from related
sites and third-party Web sites that provide data to potential investors.
OTHER BASIC IR PRACTICES
Obviously, basic IR has a lot of administrative tasks that need to be conquered,
such as overseeing the preparation and distribution of disclosures
and organizing conferences, presentations, and meetings. But, of course,
even with these basic IR functions, simply sending out information and providing
access to facts and figures does not compose a world-class IR program.
Most IR professionals will tell you that that is just the beginning. In
addition to the above tools and vehicles, IR professionals must engage in the
following activities:
Traditional IR: What It Is, and Why It’s Not Enough 67
Stock Market Reconnaissance
IR’s job is to keep an eye on the stock market and understand valuation. IR
must follow general economic indicators, industry-specific indicators, and
stock-specific issues. Stock price and stock volume, as well as specific ratios
such as P/E or EV/EBITDA relative to industry competitors, help management
understand market perception of the industry, the competition, and
their own company’s performance.
Shareholder Analysis
The makeup of institutional ownership and percentage of institutional ownership
relative to the whole is an indicator of a company’s image in the eyes
of the capital markets. Large holdings by institutions, involvement by shortsellers,
or a high degree of retail or mom-and-pop ownership indicate the
kind of holders or nonholders a stock might have. Tracking investors, the
amount of ownership, and movement can keep a company ahead of the
market currents and help the company target the investors it wants in a costeffective
manner. Knowing who your investors are, how much money they
manage, what their investment style is, and what comparable stocks they
own is essential information.
Approaching Analysts
Equity research coverage is still one of the best ways to create exposure and
gain credibility. Analysts are quoted by the media, referenced by investors,
and queried by their own brokers and traders. The potential endorsement of
coverage, and the realistic setting of earnings estimates, can lead to wider
distribution of equity, greater liquidity, less volatility, and a better multiple
for the stock.
Feedback
IR should constantly survey the capital markets to understand the attitudes
of the sell-side and the buy-side toward the company. Not understanding
perception before approaching a release or conference call is like distributing
product on gut instinct. Much like a consumer products company would
understand the market or customer before introducing an extension, IR
should understand market issues before communicating with investors. At
the end of the day, publicly traded companies are “product” to the buy- and
sell-sides, and the exercise of shareholder communication should be approached
as a marketing function to a degree.
RESOURCES FOR TRADITIONAL IR
Many good books on investor relations explain the requirements and resources
for providing the traditional IR function to investors. These books
include Investor Relations for the Emerging Company, by Ralph A. Rieves
and John Lefebvre; New Dimensions in Investor Relations, by Bruce W.
Marcus and Sherwood Lee Wallace; and Best Practices in Global Investor
Relations, by Richard B. Higgins.
These texts provide clear explanations of the IR necessities. Additionally,
many Web sites and associations provide IR information. Other critical
resources include the National Investor Relations Institute’s Web site,
NIRI.Org, and IR Magazine’s IRontheNet.Com.
REVAMPED, RAMPED UP, AND REDEFINED
Traditional IR is not enough, however. We believe it is not only about delivering
the basics, but also wrapping them in the context of valuation at any
given time. For people who sit on the sell-side and buy-side, it often seems
that companies don’t understand what they need. Rather, companies tend to
present a one-dimensional portrait.
Senior management knows the story inside and out. After all, they run
the companies. However, a large number of management teams don’t really
know how to package their story for institutional buyers or sell-side analysts.
It’s unfortunate because, if a company is packaged properly, analysts
just might take a chance on publishing or portfolio managers might begin to
accumulate a long position. In sum, the channels and methods by which
management communicates to Wall Street and Wall Street communicates to
the companies should not be underestimated. Done right, the process is simply
not as easy as many companies think.
Being on the inside with companies teaches that it takes more than traditional
IR to build or preserve value. Though going beyond the required
and voluntary disclosure of information, traditional IR can sometimes still
fall short. Unless IR operates from a capital markets perspective, understanding
the thoughts and processes of the sell-side and the buy-side, there
will always be room for improvement.
Consider these cases in point:
Missteps in Stock Market Reconnaissance
The stock market is a funny thing, and like a pot to boil, it’s best not to
watch it too closely. Companies that cross the fine line between noncha-
Traditional IR: What It Is, and Why It’s Not Enough 69
lance and obsessing over short-term stock movements can make rash decisions
to try and purge their short-sellers or have careless delays when dealing
with sizable institutional investors. Achieving that balance takes capital
markets know-how. For example, it’s best for management to not talk valuation
with analysts and portfolio managers. After all, they are the professionals.
Rather, management should get counsel from IR that understands
all of the implications and consequences of any market moves.
Missteps in Shareholder Analysis
IR that monitors share price to gauge market perception is somewhat behind
the curve. Although important, stock price movement is the tail wagging
the dog to a degree, and IR must know the likely impact of a company
decision before the shareholders render their judgment in the form of buying
or selling.
Missteps in Approaching Analysts
Having a handle on analysts’ estimates and the consensus estimate helps a
company stay in control of its story and engage The Street as an active, participatory
voice. But analysts are not just smart, calculating evaluators, they
are human beings who rely heavily on trust to devise those estimates and
recommendations. Not just any approach will do. Management must control
this process, as it can be a significant part of building valuation and raising
capital.
The public establishment of estimates by a company to The Street,
guidance, is perhaps one of the most essential practices of IR that this book
covers. One of the biggest missteps we’ve seen in the relationships that
companies have with the investment community is when they decide not to
give guidance. This inaction stems from a management view that if they
don’t give guidance, they won’t be measured against the numbers. The reality
is that analysts must make projections with or without guidance from
the companies, so companies are losing control of a number that will exist
anyway. Effective IR should always counsel management to take control of
that process.
Missteps in Obtaining Feedback
Though management might think they are getting clear feedback from analyst
conversations, they may not recognize that the sell-side and buy-side
rarely say anything to jeopardize access to management. That’s because access leads to information, which is the currency of Wall Street. It enables
both analysts and portfolio managers to either generate commissions, invest
safely, or avoid an investment altogether. Therefore, because someone’s living
is at stake, Wall Street pros are wary of giving honest (negative) feedback,
particularly to an emotional CEO or CFO.
This is the classic “Emperor Has No Clothes” scenario, where market
feedback is filtered to the company, even though it’s no-holds-barred between
analysts and investors. CEOs unwilling to take constructive criticism
because they think it’s personal are ultimately not conducting themselves in
the best interest of shareholders.
A BETTER APPROACH
IR with a capital markets background guards against many of these missteps.
Companies that engage in more strategic IR know how to communicate
better with the buy-side and the sell-side and materially improve
chances of coverage and institutional ownership. Done right, this method
and knowledge can lead to more optimal media coverage, better company
morale, and many other benefits that all increase the value of the company.