CHAPTER 17 Targeting the Audience
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With the company’s message defined and the complicated issues surrounding
guidance decided upon, its time to target analysts and investors.
UNDERSTANDING THE STREET
When IR targets the buy-side and the sell-side, it should zero-in on the analysts
who cover the company’s industry or peers, and the portfolio managers
that buy similar stocks. The initial investigation should start wide, then narrow
in on a specific group.
In the spirit of casting the widest initial net, IR should pull together the
names of all sell- and buy-side analysts in the comp group/sector and compile
them into an email distribution list. Though the list will change from
quarter to quarter, it’s a good basis for ongoing communications. Even if the
company has a small market cap and three of the analysts in the sector only
follow mega-cap stocks, the mega-analysts should be put on the list. They
won’t cover the company or survive the next round of targeting, but IR
wants those analysts to be aware of the company. It may lead to a dialog
someday, as the company grows. IR should put anyone who’s relevant on
that distribution list because the incremental cost in time and money is virtually
zero.
TARGETING THE BUY-SIDE
To discover its own shareholders, IR can comb through any number of databases
and create an Institutional Holders Report, which essentially measures
the buy-side and shows the value and percentage change in stock held by the
largest institutional investors. A large chunk of smaller-cap stocks are usually
held by just a few dozen institutional investors, and their stakes, as a
number of shares and as a percentage of the company’s total outstanding
shares, are publicly available.
After discovering the company’s top shareholders, IR should run a peer
analysis and identify the top shareholders of its comp base. This cross-reference
of ownership puts the pieces of the puzzle into perspective. If an institution
does not own the company’s stock, but is buying many other companies
in the sector, there is an opportunity to target this institution as a
potential buyer.
In addition to just knowing whether or not the buy-side institution owns
the company’s stock, IR must determine the following about the institution:
Amount of capital being managed
Investment style, for example, growth or value investor
Portfolio activity, specifically as it relates to the company’s industry (are
they buyers or sellers during any given quarter?)
With that information in hand, IR can zero in on the right buy-side institutions
and connect management with the right PMs. Without that information,
IR is guessing, the entire effort is compromised, and the time and
money spent visiting the wrong institutions can be a complete waste.
As a basic example, let’s take a restaurant chain we’ll call The Bubble
Factory. Table 17.1 lists the large institutional investors and their ownership
in The Bubble Factory and the Bubble Factory’s Peer Group: California
Pizza Kitchen Inc. (CPKI), Red Robin Gourmet Burger (RRGB), and PF
Chang’s China Bistro, Inc. (PFCB).
It’s obvious because of the representative ownership in the other companies
in this peer group that a few large institutions could own more of The
Bubble Factory.
When it comes to approaching the specific funds, IR should deliver, in
advance, a one-page profile of the institution which is available from certain
databases. As an example, if The Bubble Factory were to meet with Baron
Asset Management, they should know some basic information, as shown in
Figure 17.1.
TARGETING THE ANALYSTS
In terms of measuring the sell-side, the IR team can tabulate trading volume
in the stock by investment bank to see which firms are trading the most
TABLE 17.1 Institutional Ownership in Peer Group
Equity
Institution Name Assets CPKI RRGB Bubble PFCB Total
Fidelity Management
& Research Co. 552.41 $22,770,800 $27,596,712 $5,009,611 $181,624,203 $237,001,326
Capital Guardian
Trust Co. 139 $54,913,000 $33,138,822 $ 88,051,822
American Century
Investments 67.132 $86,503,199 $86,503,199
Forstmann-Leff
Associates 2.955 $47,725,681 $27,313,477 $75,039,158
Westfield Capital
Management 3.5721 $74,101,940 $74,101,940
T. Rowe Price
Associates, Inc. 135.5 $11,942,304 $58,938,072 $70,880,376
Barclays Global
Investors, N.A. 760 $9,576,320 $8,132,147 $45,156,289 $62,864,756
AIM Management
Group, Inc. 60.365 $60,075,756 $60,075,756
Strong Capital
Management, Inc. 20.54 $22,435,640 $9,724,265 $51,498 $20,982,971 $53,194,374
Source: Bigdough.com
BARON CAPITAL GROUP INC.
Reported Equity Assets (U.S. $B): 6.951
Inst. Qtr. Commissions: $2,511,706 @ 0.05/Share
Reported Commissions: $9,608,000
Institution Type: Investment Advisor
Market Cap: Small-Cap, Mid-Cap
Styles: Value and Theme
Average P/E: Low
Average Yield: Low
Portfolio Turnover: Very Low
Asset Allocation: 100% Stocks
Overview
Baron Capital manages the Baron family of mutual funds, as well as separate
equity portfolios. The firm is primarily a small/mid-cap theme-oriented investor
that looks for stocks with growth characteristics with a value orientation. Baron
defines small-cap as those with market caps between $100 million and $1.5
billion and mid-cap stocks as those with market caps between $1.5 billion and $5
billion.
Strategy
The firm begins its investment approach with a top-down screen to identify what it
calls “sunrise” industry sectors which are sectors expected to benefit from social
trends and demographic changes. Baron then follows this with bottom-up
research seeking U.S. stocks with: (a) high incremental returns on investment; (b)
undervalued or unrecognized assets with appreciation potential of 50% or greater
in the next two or three years; and (c) significant positive cash flows. The firm
prefers meeting with management prior to stock purchase and often maintains
that relationship after the purchase is completed. Baron Capital conducts all
research in-house. The asset allocation for the firm is 100% equity.
Supplemental Information
Baron Capital Group, Inc. is the holding company for BAMCO, Incorporated and
Baron Capital Management, Incorporated. BAMCO is the investment advisor to
the Baron Funds. Baron Capital manages portfolios for individuals and
institutions. The firm’s 13F which is filed under the name BAMCO, Incorporated
reflects equity holdings for the mutual funds.
FIGURE 17.1 Baron’s Profile
Targeting the Audience 141
FIGURE 17.1 (continued)
Security Industry
Name Name Value Shares % Held % Port Qtr End
CAKE Restaurants
Cheesecake Factory Inc Com $159.3M 3,456,700 6.6742% 2.292% 12/31/03
KKD Restaurants
Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Inc $120.1M 3,497,800 5.7328% 1.728% 12/31/03
COM
PNRA Restaurants
Panera Bread Co Cl A $42.1M 1,083,550 3.8137% 0.606% 12/31/03
PFCB Restaurants
PF Changs China Bistro Inc Com $20.2M 401,000 1.2335% 0.290% 12/31/03
CKR Restaurants
Cke Restaurants Inc Com $17.3M 1,750,000 3.0375% 0.249% 12/31/03
CPKI Restaurants
California Pizza Kitchen Inc Com $13.0M 650,000 3.4074% 0.187% 12/31/03
Source: Used with permission from Bigdough.com
stock of the company. A measure of each analyst’s knowledge is often the
ability to sell an idea to the buy-side, and the firm’s willingness to back that
investment idea with capital on the trading desk.
IR should know the following about an analyst:
Coverage universe
All ratings within that universe
History of recommendations
Average market cap the analyst covers
Preferences
In this selection process, the most important thing for IR to know is
who matches up best with whom. Analyst support is not necessarily a numbers
game. It is a strategic effort that segments and filters until a narrow
group of high-impact prospects emerges. IR should assemble all analysts
who cover the sector, evaluate their coverage universes, and make a decision
who to target.
No other medium penetrates the buy-side and the media with as much
credibility and substance as the sell-side’s equity analyst. Despite all the negative
publicity, institutional investors read a substantial amount of sell-side
research. They may not always value the exact investment rating, but they
do pay attention to financial modeling and content.
The result of coverage is awareness, access, and credibility—all of which
generates interest that, one hopes, creates demand for the stock. And the research
report can go beyond the buy-side and the media.
Other sell-side firms often read other firm’s research, which sometimes
can lead them to call the company and possibly initiate research of their
own. The industry, including competitors, suppliers, vendors, and customers,
may also read this research, and it gives the company tremendous
third-party validation and endorsement. Finally, research reaches employees
and validates their mission which helps the overall company—more so when
it’s positive, but a negative research report can also be a huge motivator.
We’ve seen negative reports circulated to employees and tacked up on their
walls as a reminder to work even harder. In either case, research coverage
can lead to a very prosperous cycle (see Figure 17.2):
This cycle interrelates with guidance and can break down if guidance is
ignored. If guidance exists, however, and it’s conservative, the company is
positioned to perform up to expectations or to outperform those expectations.
Guidance also attracts the sell-side and increases the odds of positive
research reports as earnings targets are met. Therefore, both guidance and
targeting work together in this stage of pre-delivery to increase the odds that everyone involved in the process, from management to the analyst, is positioned
for success.
THE RESEARCH HURDLE
Even before the consolidation of the investment banks, getting coverage was
never easy. While there are hundreds of analysts, there are thousands of publicly
traded companies. Additionally, most institutional investors will only
invest in companies with large market capitalizations, that is, valuations that
are over $1 billion. Thus, if the larger sell-side firms want to generate trading
commissions, then their research should probably cover the companies
with large market capitalizations. That approach potentially leaves thousands
of publicly traded companies with no coverage.
That explains why many smaller companies don’t pursue analysts at
larger investment banks. However, many investors buy stock in companies
with market capitalizations under $1 billion. In fact, these investors specifically
seek out the mid-, small-, and micro-cap companies. As a result, many
sell-side firms work with these investors and these companies, and there are
research analysts who provide coverage. Finding these analysts is important
to a good IR effort because the benefits are too worthwhile to ignore.
Some IR professionals do not have a full appreciation for how tough an
analyst’s job is. IR often lacks a first-hand understanding of what analysts
do on a daily basis, how they are paid, and what they are looking for from
IR and from management. In preparing for delivery, IR needs to understand
these factors, because they can make the act of approaching the analyst simpler
and more effective.
Research report gets
issued or institutions read
exsisting research.
Management goes on road
show with analyst. Sales
people usually set up meeting.
Sales force calls institutions after
the meeting or the issuance of a
report to seek an order for the
purchase of shares.
FIGURE 17.2 The Virtuous Cycle of Research
THE ANALYST’S MOTIVATION AND INCENTIVE
An analyst gets paid to make good stock picks and to generate trading commissions
for the firm. There are several reasons that portfolio managers run
their commissions through certain banks, including the analyst and institutional
salesperson’s relationship with the portfolio manager; the analyst’s
knowledge on any given stock; and, certainly, good trade execution. Analysts
must also create access to management teams, providing the buy-side
with an opportunity to “hear the story from the horse’s mouth.” Therefore,
good research based on a superior industry understanding coupled with the
ability to deliver management teams to the buy-side is key. IR and management
must understand this when they target and approach any analyst.
THE MIND, AND DAY, OF AN ANALYST
Sell-side analysts overwhelmingly are absorbed in one industry or sector.
They know the industry’s history, the current situation, the dynamics and the
players, and they know it all in-depth because they live and breathe their
coverage universe every hour of every day. To be the expert, and more importantly,
to get paid, analysts not only must know their sectors well, they
also have to know them better than anyone else.
A day in the life of the analyst is spent delving into the intricacies of a
company and an industry, which means due diligence, analysis and spreadsheets,
conferences, traveling, talking to CEOs, touring factories and kicking
the tires, listening to employees talk about the latest innovations or development,
dialing for discourse with investors, reading the trades, observing the
consumer marketplace, spotting trends, fielding calls from institutional
salespeople and traders, inputting numbers into valuation models, deciding
on buy, hold, or sell recommendations, and writing them into a readable,
compelling report that says something useful and incremental. Pressure and
stress are just a few of the occupational hazards, because millions of dollars
are on the line with every stock pick. Therefore, if an analyst seems impatient
or abrupt, it’s par for the course.
The relationship in a sell-side firm between the analyst and the institutional
sales force is tenuous because the salesperson’s reputation and ultimate
success depends on the information he or she receives from the analyst.
This situation creates a climate with the potential for the analyst to be hero
one day and a dog the next. A bad pick can alienate the analyst internally
(not to mention externally with the buy-side), dramatically affect his or her
compensation, and possibly jeopardize his or her career. That said, the analyst needs to be right and is counting on management and investor relations
to be straight-forward and consistent.
Therefore, a thorough understanding of the analyst’s day-to-day duties
is needed after targeting, but before the approach. Management must understand
the leap of faith an analyst is taking when picking up a stock and
how anything but honest communication can destroy the fragile process.
The same goes for the buy-side. IR and management may only have one
chance to attract the attention of a portfolio manager, and when they do,
they better act as they understand that person’s job and understand what he
or she has to deliver to shareholders. That increases the odds of ownership,
positions the company to diversify its analyst base, and makes the most of
IR expenditures.
With the company’s message defined and the complicated issues surrounding
guidance decided upon, its time to target analysts and investors.
UNDERSTANDING THE STREET
When IR targets the buy-side and the sell-side, it should zero-in on the analysts
who cover the company’s industry or peers, and the portfolio managers
that buy similar stocks. The initial investigation should start wide, then narrow
in on a specific group.
In the spirit of casting the widest initial net, IR should pull together the
names of all sell- and buy-side analysts in the comp group/sector and compile
them into an email distribution list. Though the list will change from
quarter to quarter, it’s a good basis for ongoing communications. Even if the
company has a small market cap and three of the analysts in the sector only
follow mega-cap stocks, the mega-analysts should be put on the list. They
won’t cover the company or survive the next round of targeting, but IR
wants those analysts to be aware of the company. It may lead to a dialog
someday, as the company grows. IR should put anyone who’s relevant on
that distribution list because the incremental cost in time and money is virtually
zero.
TARGETING THE BUY-SIDE
To discover its own shareholders, IR can comb through any number of databases
and create an Institutional Holders Report, which essentially measures
the buy-side and shows the value and percentage change in stock held by the
largest institutional investors. A large chunk of smaller-cap stocks are usually
held by just a few dozen institutional investors, and their stakes, as a
number of shares and as a percentage of the company’s total outstanding
shares, are publicly available.
After discovering the company’s top shareholders, IR should run a peer
analysis and identify the top shareholders of its comp base. This cross-reference
of ownership puts the pieces of the puzzle into perspective. If an institution
does not own the company’s stock, but is buying many other companies
in the sector, there is an opportunity to target this institution as a
potential buyer.
In addition to just knowing whether or not the buy-side institution owns
the company’s stock, IR must determine the following about the institution:
Amount of capital being managed
Investment style, for example, growth or value investor
Portfolio activity, specifically as it relates to the company’s industry (are
they buyers or sellers during any given quarter?)
With that information in hand, IR can zero in on the right buy-side institutions
and connect management with the right PMs. Without that information,
IR is guessing, the entire effort is compromised, and the time and
money spent visiting the wrong institutions can be a complete waste.
As a basic example, let’s take a restaurant chain we’ll call The Bubble
Factory. Table 17.1 lists the large institutional investors and their ownership
in The Bubble Factory and the Bubble Factory’s Peer Group: California
Pizza Kitchen Inc. (CPKI), Red Robin Gourmet Burger (RRGB), and PF
Chang’s China Bistro, Inc. (PFCB).
It’s obvious because of the representative ownership in the other companies
in this peer group that a few large institutions could own more of The
Bubble Factory.
When it comes to approaching the specific funds, IR should deliver, in
advance, a one-page profile of the institution which is available from certain
databases. As an example, if The Bubble Factory were to meet with Baron
Asset Management, they should know some basic information, as shown in
Figure 17.1.
TARGETING THE ANALYSTS
In terms of measuring the sell-side, the IR team can tabulate trading volume
in the stock by investment bank to see which firms are trading the most
TABLE 17.1 Institutional Ownership in Peer Group
Equity
Institution Name Assets CPKI RRGB Bubble PFCB Total
Fidelity Management
& Research Co. 552.41 $22,770,800 $27,596,712 $5,009,611 $181,624,203 $237,001,326
Capital Guardian
Trust Co. 139 $54,913,000 $33,138,822 $ 88,051,822
American Century
Investments 67.132 $86,503,199 $86,503,199
Forstmann-Leff
Associates 2.955 $47,725,681 $27,313,477 $75,039,158
Westfield Capital
Management 3.5721 $74,101,940 $74,101,940
T. Rowe Price
Associates, Inc. 135.5 $11,942,304 $58,938,072 $70,880,376
Barclays Global
Investors, N.A. 760 $9,576,320 $8,132,147 $45,156,289 $62,864,756
AIM Management
Group, Inc. 60.365 $60,075,756 $60,075,756
Strong Capital
Management, Inc. 20.54 $22,435,640 $9,724,265 $51,498 $20,982,971 $53,194,374
Source: Bigdough.com
BARON CAPITAL GROUP INC.
Reported Equity Assets (U.S. $B): 6.951
Inst. Qtr. Commissions: $2,511,706 @ 0.05/Share
Reported Commissions: $9,608,000
Institution Type: Investment Advisor
Market Cap: Small-Cap, Mid-Cap
Styles: Value and Theme
Average P/E: Low
Average Yield: Low
Portfolio Turnover: Very Low
Asset Allocation: 100% Stocks
Overview
Baron Capital manages the Baron family of mutual funds, as well as separate
equity portfolios. The firm is primarily a small/mid-cap theme-oriented investor
that looks for stocks with growth characteristics with a value orientation. Baron
defines small-cap as those with market caps between $100 million and $1.5
billion and mid-cap stocks as those with market caps between $1.5 billion and $5
billion.
Strategy
The firm begins its investment approach with a top-down screen to identify what it
calls “sunrise” industry sectors which are sectors expected to benefit from social
trends and demographic changes. Baron then follows this with bottom-up
research seeking U.S. stocks with: (a) high incremental returns on investment; (b)
undervalued or unrecognized assets with appreciation potential of 50% or greater
in the next two or three years; and (c) significant positive cash flows. The firm
prefers meeting with management prior to stock purchase and often maintains
that relationship after the purchase is completed. Baron Capital conducts all
research in-house. The asset allocation for the firm is 100% equity.
Supplemental Information
Baron Capital Group, Inc. is the holding company for BAMCO, Incorporated and
Baron Capital Management, Incorporated. BAMCO is the investment advisor to
the Baron Funds. Baron Capital manages portfolios for individuals and
institutions. The firm’s 13F which is filed under the name BAMCO, Incorporated
reflects equity holdings for the mutual funds.
FIGURE 17.1 Baron’s Profile
Targeting the Audience 141
FIGURE 17.1 (continued)
Security Industry
Name Name Value Shares % Held % Port Qtr End
CAKE Restaurants
Cheesecake Factory Inc Com $159.3M 3,456,700 6.6742% 2.292% 12/31/03
KKD Restaurants
Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Inc $120.1M 3,497,800 5.7328% 1.728% 12/31/03
COM
PNRA Restaurants
Panera Bread Co Cl A $42.1M 1,083,550 3.8137% 0.606% 12/31/03
PFCB Restaurants
PF Changs China Bistro Inc Com $20.2M 401,000 1.2335% 0.290% 12/31/03
CKR Restaurants
Cke Restaurants Inc Com $17.3M 1,750,000 3.0375% 0.249% 12/31/03
CPKI Restaurants
California Pizza Kitchen Inc Com $13.0M 650,000 3.4074% 0.187% 12/31/03
Source: Used with permission from Bigdough.com
stock of the company. A measure of each analyst’s knowledge is often the
ability to sell an idea to the buy-side, and the firm’s willingness to back that
investment idea with capital on the trading desk.
IR should know the following about an analyst:
Coverage universe
All ratings within that universe
History of recommendations
Average market cap the analyst covers
Preferences
In this selection process, the most important thing for IR to know is
who matches up best with whom. Analyst support is not necessarily a numbers
game. It is a strategic effort that segments and filters until a narrow
group of high-impact prospects emerges. IR should assemble all analysts
who cover the sector, evaluate their coverage universes, and make a decision
who to target.
No other medium penetrates the buy-side and the media with as much
credibility and substance as the sell-side’s equity analyst. Despite all the negative
publicity, institutional investors read a substantial amount of sell-side
research. They may not always value the exact investment rating, but they
do pay attention to financial modeling and content.
The result of coverage is awareness, access, and credibility—all of which
generates interest that, one hopes, creates demand for the stock. And the research
report can go beyond the buy-side and the media.
Other sell-side firms often read other firm’s research, which sometimes
can lead them to call the company and possibly initiate research of their
own. The industry, including competitors, suppliers, vendors, and customers,
may also read this research, and it gives the company tremendous
third-party validation and endorsement. Finally, research reaches employees
and validates their mission which helps the overall company—more so when
it’s positive, but a negative research report can also be a huge motivator.
We’ve seen negative reports circulated to employees and tacked up on their
walls as a reminder to work even harder. In either case, research coverage
can lead to a very prosperous cycle (see Figure 17.2):
This cycle interrelates with guidance and can break down if guidance is
ignored. If guidance exists, however, and it’s conservative, the company is
positioned to perform up to expectations or to outperform those expectations.
Guidance also attracts the sell-side and increases the odds of positive
research reports as earnings targets are met. Therefore, both guidance and
targeting work together in this stage of pre-delivery to increase the odds that everyone involved in the process, from management to the analyst, is positioned
for success.
THE RESEARCH HURDLE
Even before the consolidation of the investment banks, getting coverage was
never easy. While there are hundreds of analysts, there are thousands of publicly
traded companies. Additionally, most institutional investors will only
invest in companies with large market capitalizations, that is, valuations that
are over $1 billion. Thus, if the larger sell-side firms want to generate trading
commissions, then their research should probably cover the companies
with large market capitalizations. That approach potentially leaves thousands
of publicly traded companies with no coverage.
That explains why many smaller companies don’t pursue analysts at
larger investment banks. However, many investors buy stock in companies
with market capitalizations under $1 billion. In fact, these investors specifically
seek out the mid-, small-, and micro-cap companies. As a result, many
sell-side firms work with these investors and these companies, and there are
research analysts who provide coverage. Finding these analysts is important
to a good IR effort because the benefits are too worthwhile to ignore.
Some IR professionals do not have a full appreciation for how tough an
analyst’s job is. IR often lacks a first-hand understanding of what analysts
do on a daily basis, how they are paid, and what they are looking for from
IR and from management. In preparing for delivery, IR needs to understand
these factors, because they can make the act of approaching the analyst simpler
and more effective.
Research report gets
issued or institutions read
exsisting research.
Management goes on road
show with analyst. Sales
people usually set up meeting.
Sales force calls institutions after
the meeting or the issuance of a
report to seek an order for the
purchase of shares.
FIGURE 17.2 The Virtuous Cycle of Research
THE ANALYST’S MOTIVATION AND INCENTIVE
An analyst gets paid to make good stock picks and to generate trading commissions
for the firm. There are several reasons that portfolio managers run
their commissions through certain banks, including the analyst and institutional
salesperson’s relationship with the portfolio manager; the analyst’s
knowledge on any given stock; and, certainly, good trade execution. Analysts
must also create access to management teams, providing the buy-side
with an opportunity to “hear the story from the horse’s mouth.” Therefore,
good research based on a superior industry understanding coupled with the
ability to deliver management teams to the buy-side is key. IR and management
must understand this when they target and approach any analyst.
THE MIND, AND DAY, OF AN ANALYST
Sell-side analysts overwhelmingly are absorbed in one industry or sector.
They know the industry’s history, the current situation, the dynamics and the
players, and they know it all in-depth because they live and breathe their
coverage universe every hour of every day. To be the expert, and more importantly,
to get paid, analysts not only must know their sectors well, they
also have to know them better than anyone else.
A day in the life of the analyst is spent delving into the intricacies of a
company and an industry, which means due diligence, analysis and spreadsheets,
conferences, traveling, talking to CEOs, touring factories and kicking
the tires, listening to employees talk about the latest innovations or development,
dialing for discourse with investors, reading the trades, observing the
consumer marketplace, spotting trends, fielding calls from institutional
salespeople and traders, inputting numbers into valuation models, deciding
on buy, hold, or sell recommendations, and writing them into a readable,
compelling report that says something useful and incremental. Pressure and
stress are just a few of the occupational hazards, because millions of dollars
are on the line with every stock pick. Therefore, if an analyst seems impatient
or abrupt, it’s par for the course.
The relationship in a sell-side firm between the analyst and the institutional
sales force is tenuous because the salesperson’s reputation and ultimate
success depends on the information he or she receives from the analyst.
This situation creates a climate with the potential for the analyst to be hero
one day and a dog the next. A bad pick can alienate the analyst internally
(not to mention externally with the buy-side), dramatically affect his or her
compensation, and possibly jeopardize his or her career. That said, the analyst needs to be right and is counting on management and investor relations
to be straight-forward and consistent.
Therefore, a thorough understanding of the analyst’s day-to-day duties
is needed after targeting, but before the approach. Management must understand
the leap of faith an analyst is taking when picking up a stock and
how anything but honest communication can destroy the fragile process.
The same goes for the buy-side. IR and management may only have one
chance to attract the attention of a portfolio manager, and when they do,
they better act as they understand that person’s job and understand what he
or she has to deliver to shareholders. That increases the odds of ownership,
positions the company to diversify its analyst base, and makes the most of
IR expenditures.