CHAPTER 20 Delivering the Goods
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Once IR and management have determined conservative earnings guidance,
a target audience, a uniform approach with PR, and all the necessary infrastructure
and disclosure needs, the stage is set for delivery. The basics of
delivery are earnings announcements, conference calls, and pre-announcements.
Long-term investors manage their risk by assessing management performance
as frequently as possible. They like to know what they can expect
and when they can expect it. Moreover, if things are going to materially
change from what’s expected, these money managers want to know as soon
as possible. Predictability is good, surprise is bad, and when it comes to performance,
the pattern of delivery can sometimes be as important as the actual
results.
To that end, earnings announcements should never be a big surprise, especially
if the company has established guidance and committed to refining
that guidance throughout the year.
But even with the most conservative guidance, some factors are still out
of management’s control, such as the weather or the economy. Even under
negative circumstances there are always ways to make bad events not so
bad. The ways and means of disclosure can have a profound effect on valuation
over time.
EARNINGS ANNOUNCEMENTS
IR must make its company’s story stand out above the thousands of publicly
traded companies that interact with Wall Street everyday. To do this, to
make an initial contact interesting, IR must reach out and grab the audience.
The most basic piece of the delivery stage is the earnings release, the vehicle
through which quarterly earnings results are expressed and distributed
to investors. Because the majority of public companies are on a calendar
year, the announcements are usually clustered around the same four periods
each year (late April/early May, late July/early August, late October/early
November, and February/March), with the sell- and buy-sides geared up to
handle the high volumes of information in these short windows. Because the
volumes of reporting companies are so large, analysts look to quickly review
the press release, take from it the key points, and move on to the next reporting
company. The release must be concise, contain only the most important
information, and supply a dose of context with a brief management
comment. It must also include financial tables—outlining results and any
other information that management believes will help shareholders better
analyze the company.
Content
The earnings release is widely distributed to the buy-side, the sell-side, and
the financial media. (Appendix A offers two examples of earnings releases.)
As with any press release, the headline describes the purpose of the release
and should act as a hook to draw investors’ and analysts’ attention
(“Octagon Inc. Reports Third-Quarter Financial Results”). The subheads
should highlight the quarterly performance and/or the most material content
in the release: “Exceeds First Call Earnings Per Share by 23% / Management
Raises Guidance for Fiscal 2004.” These subheads are important because
the news wires tend to pick them up and highlight them. In the above example,
everyone is aware that Octagon beat its earnings estimate significantly
and that the full-year expectations are being increased. If the increased guidance
portion of the release had not been packaged as a subhead, however,
odds are high that the media outlets might have ignored this very material
piece of information.
The second part of the release should include bulleted highlights from
the quarter, such as revenue growth over the prior period, EBITDA if appropriate,
Free Cash Flow, new customers acquired during the quarter, and
anything else management believes is a critical driver of the business. However,
the limit is about five items, so IROs should prioritize and settle on
metrics that the analyst and portfolio manager would want, not necessarily
items of which management is most proud. The key here is to deliver the
right message in a succinct fashion.
After the highlights, a quick paragraph can appear describing the results
for the quarter as they relate to revenues, net income, and diluted earnings
per share, and the year-over-year comparisons. That section should be followed
by a quote from the CEO that talks about the quarter.
Next, a paragraph can outline other drivers for the period, such as new
customer counts, average weekly sales, and strategy points. Still later might
be a paragraph discussing the balance sheet—cash balance, long-term debt,
and shareholder’s equity. The final quote should be from the CEO and is
most effective when talking about strategy and his or her overall vision for
the company and shareholders. Finally, before the financial tables, a guidance
section should appear that addresses the upcoming quarter and the full
year. There should also be a full description of the business in safe-harbor
language that protects forward-looking statements.
Remember that this is only an outline. The final product must be a combination
of IR, management, and legal counsel. However, be succinct and
avoid endless paragraphs of information or language that doesn’t immediately
imbed itself with investors. While too many quotes can also be a distraction,
in the past, they were less important because analysts and investors
could cull the specific information from releases or just call management to
gain additional insight. But subsequent to Reg FD, management must be
more careful about the added color they give in private calls. For that reason,
the release and the quotes are both templates for disclosure, so any direct
word from the company must be deliberate and thought out.
THE CONFERENCE CALL
Conference calls are one of the most common and expected vehicles for
communicating quarterly financial performance. Before Reg FD, an overwhelming
majority of larger companies conducted them, but not every
small-cap company followed suit. These days, nearly every company conducts
them, and all companies Web cast them.
The simultaneous Web cast allows everyone to be on the call, from big
institutional investors to individuals who own 100 shares. It’s an opportunity
to listen to management explain quarterly results and convey their vision
of the future. More importantly, because it reaches the masses, the conference
call and Web cast function as the company’s disclosure template until
the next quarterly call. In other words, if it’s discussed on the conference
call, on record, the CEO, CFO, or IRO can talk about it on private phone
calls, at exclusive Wall Street conferences, or in one-on-one meetings. The
conference call is the ultimate safety net for Reg FD.
In terms of structure and content for the call, the first section should be
an introduction from the IRO or legal counsel that includes who will be on
the call, what topics will be covered, and a reading of the Safe Harbor language
that protects the company should actual performance not match fore-
Delivering the Goods 163
casts. This section should be followed by the CEO, who discusses the quarter
in general, and addresses mostly qualitative initiatives that went on during
the three month period. Next up is the CFO who discusses in great detail
the top-line and its drivers, a line-by-line examination of expenses (not only
as a percentage of sales but versus the prior-year period), a balance sheet review,
and guidance. Finally, the CEO wraps up the call, but before Q&A, he
or she should comment on strategies and plans for the upcoming quarter
and year and leave the audience with three or four points why the company
is interesting at this particular point in time.
Analysts and portfolio managers know that the conference call is the
most efficient and effective way for management to communicate with The
Street, and because of this importance, the calls must always be scripted,
with topics and speakers specified and limited.
Scripting the Call
Part of the analyst’s job is to distill the company’s message into a persuasive
and credible opinion and share that view with clients in the investment community.
Therefore, IR should draft the conference call script with this perspective
in mind.
The IR professional should ask, If I could write the analyst report after
the call, how would it look?
This approach underscores the necessity for making key points and
highlighting the positives of the business in a way that the analyst and portfolio
manager are used to seeing. To that point, the script must be realistic
and credible, but take license to discuss strategic or operational initiatives
with enthusiasm. The hope is that these highlights make their way to analysts
in the next morning’s First Call notes in the same manner that they
were presented. In fact, that’s the entire goal of the call: getting management’s
exact point of view in the analysts’ research coverage, and having
them understand and buy into the strategy, all while keeping their First Call
estimates within management’s range.
As stated, the number-one rule for conference calls is that every word
must be scripted. In fact, management should begin preparing the script,
with IR, about three weeks in advance so that the CEO and CFO are fully
prepared. Why script every word? Because the call should last only 20 to 30
minutes, and without the script CEOs can frequently get off message and
speak in tangents about issues that may not be relevant to the call. In that
case, management has just wasted one of its four annual earnings calls by
rambling and looking unprepared. Our hunch is that analysts and portfolio
managers will pick up on that fact and think twice about getting involved.
Staying on script is also essential because today’s conference calls are
transcribed, widely distributed, and scrutinized. Oftentimes, portfolio managers
want to read the conference call transcript, hear about progress from
management directly, and check that view with the sell-side. That’s why
scripting each word, rather than working off bullet points or ad-libbing, is
necessary. Transcripts are a new form of research report complete with estimates
from management, and it’s a huge advantage if IR views it as such.
(Appendix B offers an example of a conference call script.)
Writing the script is a process that includes the following steps:
Management discussions: Executives are constantly crunched for time,
and SEC requirements don’t help that process at quarter’s end. IR’s lead on
preparing for the conference call helps management begin the process and
avoid mistakes that can accompany a last-minute rush.
Therefore, three or four weeks before the call, IR should talk to the
CEO and CFO, review the performance for the quarter, and determine what
topics will be most relevant for the call. These would include strategic issues,
financial performance, and a recap of material announcements during the
period. Once discussed and approved, IR then has an idea of what management
believes is important or material to communicate.
Also, although other departments within the company should not speak
on the actual call, they should be represented. For example, if an important
marketing initiative is launching in the second half of the year, it should be
discussed and scripted into the appropriate section. Or if the controller
has a better interpretation of why an important expense line-item didn’t
meet expectations, it can be discussed with IR and incorporated. When
senior management can speak in detail to these issues, analysts are impressed
and left with the perception that management is very much in-tune
with the business and running a tight ship. The comfort level that affords investors
is so highly coveted by sell- and buy-side analysts that a premium
multiple is often paid for stocks where management is communicating at
such proficient levels.
During the internal due diligence, IR has to set the tone of the call and
judge everything relative to valuation. Much information will be contributed
from the definition stage, but it’s always worth a quick revisit as definition
can change frequently, in tandem with stock movements. For example, if
things are going poorly for a company and the stock is already down, the
strategy for the conference call is very different than if the news is bad and
the stock is at a 52-week high. Capital markets experience and expertise can
tell management in what context to deliver the news.
Street recon: IR that is tapped into Wall Street perceptions already knows the overarching messages that should be stressed or defended in any
given quarter and will incorporate it with the messages that come from the
original meeting with management.
IR should query as to the specific concerns that analysts and investors
have regarding the company—for example, recent expense escalations, offbalance-
sheet debt, or the effectiveness of a certain marketing campaign.
Also, IR that has the connections to seek out and understand the “bear
story” on a company is invaluable and allows management to address specific
negatives on each call.
The process of collecting information from analysts or portfolio managers
can be very difficult, however, in that Wall Street professionals have
little time to share their perceptions, particularly around earnings season.
Accordingly, IR must build long-standing relationships, and capital markets
knowledge increases the odds that those relationships will develop.
Talking the language of the portfolio manager or analyst is the best way to
start an intelligent dialogue, garner real feedback, and pass it on unfiltered
to management.
Writing the drafts: Once IR has spoken to management and the outside
world, it should take the lead in writing the conference call script, adhere to
an agreed-upon format, and deliver the initial draft to the CEO and CFO
within a preset schedule.
For example, about a week after the initial meeting with management,
IR should have a first draft of the release and script ready to go. 48 hours
later, management should agree to give comments back to IR, and the whole
process should be repeated as the financials come together and the auditors
do their job.
Then, about a week before the call, the conference call invitation
should be sent to the wire utilizing the distribution list that was compiled in
the earlier stages of delivery. Once the CEO, the CFO, and IR have turned
two or three drafts of the script, with each party adding and subtracting
ideas, the final draft should be shown to legal and the audit committee for
final approval.
Being proactive: IR and management must collectively decide which issues
to emphasize during the quarter. IR may encourage a reluctant management
team to discuss a tough issue in the script rather than address it in
Q&A because it’s a proactive way to control the information and mitigate
risk. If, for example, the issue is ignored in the script because the CEO deems
it too uncomfortable to discuss, she may find herself off balance in Q&A,
fumbling for an answer that’s scribbled down on a cheat sheet. If scripted
from the beginning, however, the CEO can simply refer back to her prepared
remarks on the topic and move on to the next question. An example of a tough issue for a CEO might be downward margin trends in the face of rising
sales or the loss of a major customer or why the company doesn’t give
guidance. Allowing sophisticated portfolio managers or analysts to lead a
company down a line of questioning that the CEO is already uncomfortable
with can only make management look bad, and unfortunately the entire dialogue
will be transcribed for the world to see. That’s too much risk, and
there’s no reason to incur it.
Be prepared: Given the opportunity to be extemporaneous and not follow
a script, management might get off message and use a phrase, or even a
qualifier like “significant,” to describe a new initiative. A simple word or
nuance can send an unintended signal to analysts and portfolio managers
who are trained to quantify everything they hear from management. For example,
on a conference call, management might be talking about an initiative
for the upcoming year, and although it won’t be a contributor to earnings,
the CEO who’s not scripted might say, “it’s going to be a significant
part of our business going forward.” This might encourage analysts to incorporate
the new business line into their models and increase their earnings
estimates. If this unwanted analysis skews the average First Call estimate
upward, the company has just put itself in position to miss estimates. For
these reasons, management must be very careful even with what it believes
is mundane language.
Therefore, the point of a script is to stick to it, and management and IR
should practice to ensure that the executives can deliver the prepared remarks
with familiarity and ease. Additionally, IR should know, from its
Street reconnaissance and industry knowledge, the questions that are likely
to be asked. These questions can be subtly addressed in the script with some
pre-emptive language to nullify the question altogether. At the very least,
they should be written and reviewed so that management can prep for the
interaction.
In this preparation, IR should highlight specific talking points, as well as
issues to avoid, so that management can steer back to port if the call gets
bumpy. Preparation helps management present well and build credibility,
which is the name of the game when it comes to valuation. Ultimately, the
CEO and the CFO must come across as confident, answer all questions thoroughly,
and articulate a clear vision for the future.
Front and Center: Topics and Their Speakers
The voices on the conference call become the public voices of the company,
and the public role of the company executives should reflect their jobs.
Therefore, have two or three speakers at most represent the company. The first is the CEO. Not too many investors would buy a stock without listening
to, if not sitting down in person with, the CEO. The next individual
on the call might be the chief operating officer, who handles the day-to-day
operations. Finally the CFO should be on the call.
On an obvious level, this introduces the sell- and buy-sides to the executives
in charge, putting a voice to the vision, operations, and numbers. On
a subliminal level, it shows a cohesive, connected team in which the members
understand the business and their roles. By giving each executive specific
issues to cover, IR helps senior management put their best face forward
to The Street.
For purposes of disclosure and liability the company should be very particular
about who is on the call and who will interact with the investment
community on a day-to-day basis. One of the oldest analyst techniques is to
call different executives in the company—the CEO, the COO, and then the
CFO—and ask the same few questions to each, and look for points of discrepancy
that reveal incremental information.
To avoid this, a formal policy should be in place. The best analogy to
help clients understand the ramifications of no policy is to imagine the conference
call as a trial. If IR is the defense attorney, he must decide who will
be put on the witness stand. There are pros and cons for each person. For
example, it would be great to have the head of marketing explain the new
program for the upcoming year or the head of human resources talk about
the latest batch of hires. Better yet, the head of technology could talk about
the new Web initiative. Of course, if only IR were doing the questioning
after prepared remarks, it would be an easy choice to let these people speak,
but the line is filled with money managers, hedge funds, and short sellers.
Much like a trial, allowing someone to speak during prepared remarks
opens them up to questioning on the conference call, phone calls after the
conference call, and potentially questions during the quarter via email or
phone. The head of marketing would be viewed as another company source
from whom to gather information, and analysts and portfolio managers may
start calling multiple senior-level workers within the company. Therefore, to
control the information that is directed to Wall Street, IROs must limit the
number of participants on the call and make sure everyone has a unified
message, particularly intra-quarter.
What to Watch For on Conference Calls
Conference calls can succeed or fail for several reasons, and success relies on
preparation and management’s ability to hone in on content and delivery.
For analysts and portfolio managers, some things just don’t sit well.
Tell just enough: A company that spends five minutes on prepared remarks
and leaves the rest to Q&A gives too much room for analyst interpretation.
It can also send a message that the company isn’t taking the call
seriously or that they’d rather not share their information. On the other side
of the spectrum, a company that spends 45 minutes on prepared remarks is
simply taking up too much time, and that drain prevents investors and analyst
from participating in a Q&A session afterward, which is critical. Fortyfive
minutes shows that a company doesn’t know how to concisely tell its
story to the world. When in doubt, companies that want to disclose many
variables should put them in a supplemental disclosure section of the press
release for all to see.
Stay on point: The script should help management address specific topics
and avoid irrelevant or confusing tangents and trouble spots. Executives
must spend time on the focus of the call, possibly an earnings miss, in great
detail, before moving on to strategy and the company’s outlook. Glossing
over these points positions the CEO as unrealistic and a potential investment
risk. That’s why the script, with related investment community feedback
built in, is so important.
Don’t hype: Executives work hard all year with few moments to stand
up and garner recognition for the company’s operating results. The call may
seem like the perfect time for this, although in actuality, it’s not the right
forum. Management must allow the analysts and portfolio managers to
characterize the performance. Management should keep it somewhat matter
of fact and stay even-keel, whether times are good or bad. The Street wants
to hear the explanation behind recent performance and the essence of what
will happen for the remainder of the year.
Don’t hide: Regardless if the management team decides to be proactive
or not in the script, problems can’t be glossed over. Executives who talk
about positive issues when a big negative is looming are making a big mistake
and jeopardizing their own credibility. Management should state the
facts, the reasons behind them, and the actions being taken to fix the problem.
Management shouldn’t take the siutation personally because quarterly
misses happen every day on Wall Street. Management should be up-front
and overly available. How a management team handles the bad times on
their conference calls can define their public company careers and be a major
determinant of valuation.
Watch words: As stated earlier, it’s not just what is said, it’s how it’s said.
In conference calls, the littlest things might matter the most. The Street always
pays close attention to nuance, innuendo, and tone. Their job is to
quantify everything that management says, and determine what that means
to EPS.
Believe it or not, a certain word or a shift in tone or inflection can affect
the interpretation of information and shift the investor’s mindset up or
down. The difference between “very good” and “good” has meaning to the
analyst and portfolio manager. If these words are not quantified, the meanings
can be widely interpreted.
Analysts and portfolio managers cringe when they hear certain words or
phrases. Phrases such as “explosive earnings” or “our guidance might prove
to be very conservative” can ruin IR’s plan. The phrases are factored into the
share price immediately and many times set an unintended bar by which
management will be judged.
Dealing with shorts on the call: Short sellers are not necessarily the
enemy, although they certainly don’t brighten management’s day. They are
usually short-term players who have made a bet against the company because
the stock has increased in value, and in their minds the earnings don’t
justify the multiple. There’s risk involved in shorting stocks, however, so if
they borrow and sell short, they’ve probably done some solid research to arrive
at their bearish opinion.
If IR knows that the short interest in the stock is high, they need to prepare
the script with proactive explanations that address each point of the bear
story. Because the company does not want to enter a public debate on a conference
call, short sellers should not be confronted. Management should simply
put forth its counterarguments and then, if necessary, agree to disagree.
Although someone betting against management can lead to an emotional
situation, executives need to be matter-of-fact on the call and understand
that it’s not personal. The shorts may think the company is great, just
too expensive. Or they may be making a short-term bet. At the end of the
day, however, management shouldn’t waste time confronting short sellers on
the call. Delivering solid EPS growth over time is the only way to send these
players on their way.
Other Interested Parties
The earnings announcement and conference call typically get beyond the
sell-side and the buy-side. In fact, there are several constituencies to consider,
and management should have a systematic procedure in place to disseminate
and explain the quarterly information.
Stakeholders: Employees, vendors, and customers should be notified
first and foremost on any important company news. The employees are the
heart and soul of any organization, and one way to keep them motivated is
to keep them involved and educated. Any procedure for communication
should include an internal process that precedes, within Regulation FD constraints,
the external one. The CEO, not the local media or the Internet,
should be the first source of information for employees on company news.
If it’s feasible, and if it would underscore goodwill in a relationship,
strategic partners such as vendors and customers should also have an announcement
tailored toward them. An announcement after the market
closes and moments before the call to The Street keeps the team in sync. This
is especially important if it’s a cost-cutting measure or a merger that will result
in the closing of certain operations or layoffs. No one wants to hear
about their plant closing on the radio in the carpool.
Other agencies: Sometimes additional phone calls are required following
the announcement. A company with a pending lawsuit was about to announce
the judgment. IR called NASDAQ and told them to halt trading;
then the company made the announcement. The judgment was going to be
considered material to shareholders, and trading volume would definitely be
affected. To encourage an orderly market and decrease volatility, IR wanted
to make sure the news was evenly disseminated.
IR’s responsibility is to know who has to be called and when on any announcement
that may have a consequence for that agency, even if the market
is closed.
It’s All in the Timing
Just as important as the content and structure of the release and conference
call is the timing. Many companies may not give the issue much thought, but
it’s an important part of reducing risk in the overall communications
process.
Analysts see companies release their earnings throughout the day. Some
would be the first ones out at 7:00 a.m., others at 11:00 a.m., a few at 3:00
p.m., and many at 4:00 p.m. or later. The subsequent conference calls might
also be scattered throughout the day. This shotgun approach just isn’t
smart, and IR should take control of the process and educate management
on timing.
The first series of checks IR should make are to competitors’ schedules.
Look on any of the information services and determine when the competition
is reporting. Most companies make that information public well in advance.
If they don’t, IR might look at prior-year releases to get a feel for timing.
Once a reporting grid is composed, IR should evaluate timing with
management and pick a release date that’s relatively vacant from peer reporting.
There’s no need to rush. It’s more important to be ready, on a date
when none of management’s competitors will be releasing results.
Rushing to get auditors in and out so that earnings can be reported
quickly just doesn’t seem to make sense, particularly in the new age of information.
In fact, there are no negative ramifications of reporting four
weeks after the quarter closes rather than three. The better route is to take
the time to ensure that results are accurate, sign off on them feeling confident,
script the call, practice Q&A, and listen to other industry calls. To that
last point, reporting later rather than sooner gives IR and management time
to gather competitive information by listening to other industry conference
calls. IR can read each competitor’s release and conference call transcript
and get a feel for industry results as well as perceptions and tones on Wall
Street. As a result, management is more prepared, and the risk of surprise is
materially reduced. Therefore, being one of the last companies in an industry
to report can be a good thing. If there is a risk in waiting, however, it
would manifest itself during a quarter where peers are reporting bad news.
Under this circumstance, the company’s stock would likely trade down with
the group before it has a chance to put out its earnings and control the information.
Pre-announcements can take care of this problem, a topic that is
addressed later in the chapter.
So how about time of day?
Many companies report earnings in the morning before the market
opens at 9:30 a.m., then conduct their conference call at 11 a.m. Better yet,
some companies release earnings at 11 a.m. and conduct the call at 1 p.m. In
theory, management probably thinks that it would lose the audience if it reported
either before the market opened or after it closed. That theory, however,
is just a guess on management’s part, and IR should do some educating
based on its capital markets perspective.
When the earnings release hits the tape during market hours—let’s say,
11 a.m.—traders, institutional salespeople, and investors immediately call
the analyst to decipher the information. Since the analyst hasn’t talked to
management yet, and legally cannot until the conference call because of disclosure
issues, they really can’t give an informed opinion to the world.
“[XYZ Company] is planning to report its 16 week Q1:04 EPS before
the market open on May 13, with its conference call after the close.
The gap between the EPS press release and the conference call could
create material volatility during the day of May 13 if there are ambiguities
in the press release.”
—From an analyst’s email, April 28, 2004.
Therefore, the trading desk will make a snap judgment on its stock position
without company comment and without analyst comment. With that
judgment can come volatility in the stock. This process becomes even more
complex when the earnings release is complicated. If Reuters or Bloomberg
picks up the wrong headline or misinterprets the release, for example, the
market may move unnecessarily, which can have a serious effect on the stock
price, and whipsaw shareholders.
Companies should distribute their releases and conduct their conference
calls after the market closes. Specifically, the announcement should hit the
tape at 4:01pm and the call should start at 4:30 p.m. or 5:00 p.m. EST.
This method is good for several reasons, including the fact that there’s
less distraction on the trading floor and less opportunity for an unnecessary
reaction, based on a confusing release. For example, a retailer might have inventory
levels that appear higher than sales can sustain. Investors who see
this on the balance sheet might hit the sell button if the release is distributed
during market hours, prior to a conference call. But if the market is closed
and the company has a chance to explain that these inventory levels are built
into the projections for new store openings, investors may hesitate before
selling the stock, or not sell it at all.
The other advantage of distributing the release after the market closes is
that the sell-side has time to collect its thoughts, ask management questions,
and prepare a written conclusion for their First Call update. During the day,
the analyst is barraged with calls, the market is open, and the stock freely
moves as the conference call is being conducted. In addition, traders may be
out to lunch and institutional salespeople may be focused on other ideas or
they may be escorting management teams to buy-side meetings. In other
words, the release and the subsequent analyst call are diluted in the commotion
of the day. If the market is closed, none of these issues are present
and management is maximizing the opportunity to tell its story in a risk-free
environment.
Therefore, understanding the atmosphere on the other side of the capital
markets, the life of the portfolio manager, and the day of the sell-side analyst
helps to clarify why IR should choose this approach. To further maximize
the effort, it’s extremely beneficial to understand how the day of the
sell-side begins.
The Morning Meeting
To truly understand the analysts, their obligations, and their relationships
with the sales force, one has to understand the morning meeting at an investment
bank.
The morning meeting is the primary means of formal communication
between an analyst and the institutional sales force. This is ultimately where
investment ideas are introduced, debated, and delivered. For example, the
analyst makes his/her argument to buy or sell a stock, and if it’s persuasive,
the sales force, which can number from 10 to 50 individuals, will pick up
their phones and call roughly 10 or more institutional investors each (Fidelity,
Putnam, and Capital Research to name a few). This communication
channel is very powerful, to say the least, and one that IROs should take advantage
of.
Every day, Monday through Friday, from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. or thereabouts,
investment banks and brokerage firms conduct the morning meeting.
Picture a large trading floor, fluorescent lights, rows of desks, stacks of
computer screens, and the buzz of suits and skirts adjusting their headsets,
folding their newspapers, finishing off their coffee, getting ready for the day.
At the front of the room is a podium with a microphone that will connect
the speaker’s voice to the vast network of salespeople who listen to the investment
bank’s ideas on any given morning.
Controlling the proceedings is a facilitator, the morning meeting gatekeeper.
He runs the show on a daily basis, and along with the director of research
preselects a handful of analysts to present their ideas each day. Competition
to present one of those ideas is fierce, and analysts must lobby for a
spot on the schedule. This selection is important to analysts for a couple of
reasons. First, getting on the morning meeting and having their investment
ideas supported by the sales force makes a name for the analyst among institutions,
and these institutions vote for analysts and determine a portion of
their compensation. Second, being on the morning meeting means that the
analyst in question is most likely upping or lowering their rating on a stock,
and those actions facilitate commission business on the trading desk. Again,
this is a determinant of analyst compensation. Therefore, the analyst is always
looking for undervalued or overvalued ideas and to bring those ideas
to the morning meeting.
So the key for IR is to understand the analyst’s mentality and find a way
to be one of those few Buy ideas on the morning meeting. That’s how to fully
maximize an earnings release and conference call and how to maximize the
relationship with any investment bank.
The first lesson on how to make the cut for the morning meeting is to be
an undervalued, interesting company with trusted management. Hold-rated
stocks aren’t presented in the morning meeting. Why? Because, a Hold rating
doesn’t generate a nickel of commission business. Therefore, it’s imperative
to be a Buy.
Getting to the Buy Rating
Positioning a stock as a Buy rating is the reason that IR must go to such
lengths in the definition stage to craft a message and package it in the way
analysts and investors can relate. The objective is to have it play out something
like this:
IR joins a quirky consumer company, refines its comp group, and determines
that it should be valued on EBITDA versus earnings. It’s a more accurate
valuation method for this capital-intensive company and casts it as undervalued
in the new peer group. Then, IR garners feedback from
management, the buy-side, and industry sources, drafts the earnings release
and conference call script, and prepares thoroughly for Q&A. IR, along
with management, also sets conservative guidance and conducts the conference
call at 5 p.m. EST, thereby controlling the dissemination information.
After the call, the analyst likes management and their approach and
views the numbers as conservative relative to the peer group. With time to
collect his or her thoughts, a well-thought-out research report is written, incorporating
management’s conservative guidance. Given the fact that estimates
are low, a great argument can be made that the stock is a Buy. The analyst
lobbies the gatekeeper to get his or her idea on the morning meeting,
and because management and IR have packaged the product conservatively
in both the release and the call, the green light is given and the analyst is
awarded the lead-off spot for the morning meeting.
The result: IR, along with management, has almost made the stock a
Buy through a strategic approach that fully understands how an investment
bank operates. If these practices are followed every quarter, particularly conservative
guidance, the institutional profile of the company will no doubt be
raised, volume will likely increase, and a higher valuation will ensue.
On the other hand, a promotional management team with aggressive
guidance doesn’t stand a chance of getting on the morning meeting because
of the increased risk to earnings estimates. The institutional sales force and
the buy-side will rarely support the stock when management has established
a pattern that is not conservative. There’s just too high a risk of losing
money. Whereas in the case above, management has essentially made the analyst
look good to the sales force because earnings are positioned to exceed
guidance. This in turn generates a buying opportunity and commissions for
the analyst’s firm. For the company, the multiple increased and the cost of
capital declined.
Had the company stretched with its guidance and released earnings during
the day, the stock would have immediately moved to a level commensurate with the perceived risk to earnings, and by the next morning there
would have been no investment call to make.
Putting It Together
Here are a couple of examples of how the entire process works.
Zippa!, the popular apparel brand mentioned earlier, discovered after
the IR audit that not only wasn’t it being clear in its definition, specifically
with regard to its product diversification, but that it hadn’t clearly communicated
this reality to The Street. Once the company had packaged this “new
product” for the investment community and established earnings guidance,
IR scripted a call that would clarify their old-to-them, but new-to-The-
Street, position.
After delivering the new message, backed up by numbers, in an aftermarket-
hours conference call, analysts walked away with a new understanding
of Zippa!. The company was clearer about its business and conservative
in its guidance. New analysts picked up coverage and delivered the
new thesis, old analysts changed their views, and despite the fact that Zippa!
missed its sales estimate, the stock increased nearly 20 percent the day after
the call. The PR group was thus positioned for positive stories in the media,
articles that could speak to the financial strengths and diversity of the business.
This approach took much of the risk perception out of the stock. None
of this was new, nothing had changed with regard to the way the company
did business. It was just delivering the critical information to Wall Street in
a way it could understand. Erasing the disconnect between perception and
reality.
After the call, several analysts called to thank the IR team, saying it was
one of the best messages they’d ever heard. Analysts and investors had unknowingly
foundered when it came to Zippa!, although the fault was really
in the company’s historic communications practices. IR made the analysts’
job much easier because issues were formally addressed in an open forum
with plenty of time for questions and answers. With access to new information
that before wasn’t readily available, the investment community recognized
a new positioning for Zippa!, right up there with a more mature,
global businesses. The conference call improved The Street’s perception of
the company, took risk out of the stock, and positioned it for a higher multiple,
creating tens of millions of dollars in value for shareholders.
Soft Sofas, a company in the home furnishings sector, had slow sales one
quarter and achieved Wall Street’s expectations only through a one-time gain
because of an asset sale. This result was technically a miss and would be viewed negatively by analysts. They began their conference call talking
about new initiatives and glossing over the financials. Big mistake.
The analysts and portfolio managers on the call, professionals at dissecting
financials, took notice. Management obviously missed estimates and
was trying to take attention away from that fact. Nothing could penalize
management more, and the odds that Soft Sofa would get on any morning
meeting schedule at any investment bank for the foreseeable future were seriously
jeopardized (other than as a Sell recommendation).
Soft Sofas should have started the conference call by announcing that
sales were down and then talk about the problems that contributed to this
slump and what factors were offsetting hoped-for growth. If management
had acknowledged the problem, identified its source, and given new guidance,
Wall Street would have handicapped the company’s ability to fix the
problem, lowered estimates, and if the stock dropped materially, had the
analyst on the morning meeting schedule to talk about the equity as undervalued.
By communicating this understanding, along with a strategy for
change, management could have built the kind of credibility that can never
be attained by trying to avoid issues with hype.
PRE-ANNOUNCEMENTS
The last agenda item on delivery is the pre-announcement. Management
competency is measured by more than the strategic vision to build a business;
it also includes the ability to understand the audience and communicate
the business. As far as Wall Street is concerned, earnings guidance is a
great indicator of management capacity because it tests the budgeting and
forecasting process and shows that management isn’t afraid to set the bar for
performance.
Granted, Wall Street also understands that factors beyond management’s
control cause earnings to drop. When the problem is the economy,
the weather, competition, or a national security incident, an earnings miss is
usually explainable. What is not easy to explain, however, are hiccups in the
core business where management should have had control. Managing the
unexpected is part of the job, and management that has been conservative in
setting the bar, even if it means a lower short-term stock price, has given its
estimates breathing room to deal with the unexpected.
The reason the market rewards upward earnings revisions is the perception,
right or wrong, that the executives are operationally sound and that systems
are in place to measure and predict financial performance. Wall Street
101: the market likes predictability and certainty, not risk and volatility.
Take, for example, this quote from a March 18, 2004, analyst’s report
on a restaurant conglomerate. “We have low confidence in our EPS estimate
of $1.46 and $1.56 for FY04 and FY05 respectively, due in part to management’s
frequent guidance revisions, none provided in press release, and also
to the ongoing and much discussed traffic volatility at (one of the company’s
restaurants).” The analyst maintained his Hold rating.
Missing estimates also puts the analyst in a precarious position. In addition
to his own research, the analyst counts on management for reliable
guidance, and if credible, the sales force and investors also buy into those
numbers. If a company misses estimates during a quarter and the earnings
are trending lower, the analyst is going to lose credibility when the quarter
sinks beneath them. Though a number that materially beats estimates is positive
for investors in the short term, any experienced analyst will wonder
how well management is able to forecast.
Missing the Number, but Mitigating the Penalty
“Weaker than expected earnings” was the key phrase. A trader was quoted
in the article, saying: “Frankly, expectations were too high. Companies
haven’t released many pre-earnings announcements and analysts were backing
out numbers, and no one was telling them otherwise.”
If, during the quarter, management can see that the company is going to
materially miss or exceed earnings estimates, the best thing to do is to preannounce
a new guidance range as soon as possible. Getting information
out early, in good times and bad, keeps Wall Street in the loop while minimizing
surprises. And yet, while we recognize management’s obligation to
get news out as soon as they know about changes, releasing news too early
can be costly. For example, if business is trending down during the quarter
and halfway through the three-month period management revises guidance,
that’s fine—unless the company misses revised guidance, which is totally
unacceptable. Therefore, management should wait until three-quarters of
the quarter has passed, when a tangible range is known. That way, management
is not adjusting guidance without feeling 99 percent confident in
the new range.
“The tech stock rally deflated yesterday due to weaker than expected
earnings from [a Web commerce company] that torpedoed the sector
on fears that similar companies were overvalued.”
—The New York Times, October 2001.
The second part of any pre-announcement strategy is announcing the
date and time of the earnings call, probably three or four weeks later, and
making sure that it’s clear that annual guidance will be addressed again at
that time. Why is this important? If, for example, management brings down
second quarter guidance on May 30th, a month before the end of the quarter,
with no corresponding conference call, analysts may be left wondering
what to do with their annual estimates. By announcing that annual guidance
will be addressed on the upcoming call, management has just bought time
with the analysts and will likely be given the grace period before the analysts
move numbers.
Less so these days, but certainly in the late 1990s, most stocks had a
whisper number circulating. This number is exactly what it sounds like: the
estimate that the market believes as information buzzes around Wall Street.
It’s always higher or lower than First Call published consensus, but for discussion
purposes, let’s say it’s higher.
Pre-announcements help mitigate the whisper number by defining expectations
into a range. This is particularly critical with a growth stock
that’s performing well, because in the absence of an earnings pre-announcement
Wall Street is free to manufacture information leading up to the conference
call. This is the ultimate in losing control of the communications
process and allowing rumors to define expected financial performance. It
not only creates volatility but most likely puts management in position to
fall short of expectations. By pre-announcing a range, the whisper number
is eliminated.
Another reason to pre-announce earnings is if an upcoming shortfall is
caused by industry-related problems. If that’s the case, getting the news out
as soon as possible is even more important, but again, not before management
is comfortable with the revised range. On such industry-related news,
companies in the same industry will tend to move up and down together. Because
a company’s peers are likely also feeling the same effect, it’s best, if
possible, to be the first in a peer group to adjust expectations. That
way, management is on the offensive rather than reacting to a competitor
miss and any Reg FD issue is eliminated. To that point, if management is
the first to pre-announce the industry issue and new earnings estimates,
they are free to discuss it, within reason, with the buy- and sell-side. The
industry peers who don’t pre-announce will likely get a large volume of
calls that they won’t be able to field because commenting would risk a Reg
FD violation.
Ultimately, pre-announcing every quarter, even when there isn’t a material
variance from expectations, is a good policy because it doubles the
amount of communications with Wall Street from four (earnings releases) to eight (earnings releases and pre-announcements). By increasing the communication,
consistency and transparency are increased, and management’s
credibility can follow. The eight communication points also free management
of potential Reg FD violations, as referring back or forward to the latest
communication is very easy. In other words, the more communication,
the fewer windows to talk about material, nonpublic information.
Exceeding the Number, and Increasing the Reward
Many CEOs have realized the hard way that being better than expected
does not always turn out to be better than expected. In most cases, when a
company materially beats earnings estimates and waits to announce it until
the release date—for example, the First Call consensus is $0.10, and the
company reports $0.20 on earnings day—they will see their stock increase
that day.
However, Wall Street veterans look at that behavior and wonder if the
same policy goes when management misses numbers. The smart portfolio
managers ask themselves if the company can also surprise on the downside
by that much, and come to the conclusion that the company cannot forecast
its business. This can be disconcerting to the analyst or portfolio manager relying
on management for consistency and guidance. The pattern, more than
the content in this case, becomes discounted into valuation.
When an analyst recommends a stock, he or she wants to address their
sales force as many times as possible, particularly when the stock is behaving
in line with the rating. The morning meeting section taught that conservative
guidance, and meeting or exceeding guidance, can start a powerful
cycle of addressing the sales force and penetrating institutional accounts.
Octagon Inc. was in the last third of its quarter. The First Call consensus
estimate was $0.20, and the company’s own forecast, as disseminated
on the last conference call, was $0.17 to $0.20. If management
believed there was absolutely no way that earnings would be lower
than $0.22 and they’d probably be $0.25, an appropriate move would
be to pre-announce earnings and increase the range to $0.20 to $0.22.
That way, when reporting the actual quarter three to four weeks
later, management would have already known that it would report
$0.22 at minimum and most likely $0.25. If $0.25 it would be an upside
surprise, and if management reported $0.22, it would still be
within the increased range.
Therefore, if IR and management are conservative, and use pre-announcements
to raise guidance and update the market each quarter, the analyst has
that many more times to address the sales force and reiterate conviction
about the stock. Each case becomes an opportunity to generate commissions,
create a payday for the firm and analyst, build credibility for management,
bolster valuation, and reduce the company’s cost of capital.
Pre-announcing elevated to an art form can be about breaking one piece
of good news into two: giving the analyst two good data points to talk to
clients about and two pluses for addressing the sales force.
Without conservative guidance, however, management doesn’t have the
leverage to do this. Rather, they only introduce risk into the stock and increase
the company’s chance of missing estimates. Pre-announcing regularly,
particularly when times are good, reinforces the company’s upward trend,
labels management as conservative, and builds credibility.
Safety First—The Pre-Announce for Prevention
Sarbanes-Oxley and Reg FD reduce volatility in our view, because all analysts
and investors receive the information simultaneously. Unlike the Wild
West atmosphere of the 1990s, when analysts regularly extracted material
information in closed-door meetings with management teams, strict enforcement
limits incremental information.
Therefore, why wouldn’t companies pre-announce every quarter, if for
nothing else to reduce the chances of a material slip up in a one-on-one call?
With four set pre-announcements, the public information is always fresh
and management can breathe easy in casual conversations.
Another safeguard is Stock Watch, an organization that keeps an eye on
trading. If there is heavy trading volume, Stock Watch is going to call the
company and ask if they have any news. If the company says no, then they
better not come out with new information in the near future. And if the
company has a practice of pre-announcing whenever it thinks it’s going to
miss or exceed the estimate, or just in the normal course of business, then
The Street believes management and stays with guidance.
Road shows, which are discussed in the next section of the book, should
always be scheduled after the earnings calls so that the information is disseminated
before management begins the process. But in cases when that’s
not feasible, companies may want to consider pre-announcing quarterly results
or material news before the scheduled events so that management can
speak freely. If a pre-announcement is not feasible before presenting publicly,
management should be counseled to refer back to material in the last public
conference call. Legally, the company can’t break any new ground.
How to Pre-Announce
For all pre-announcements where there is a material miss—that is, actual
earnings are off by more than 20 to 30 percent—a conference call is in order
to quickly explain the problems and potential solutions. Although the last
thing management wants to do is talk about it, that’s exactly what it must do.
The conference call gives analysts and investors a chance to ask questions
and, for the misses, vent their frustration. The conference call also benefits
the analysts who have the luxury of hearing the details in an open
forum with the buy-side. Less pressure is then on the analyst because everyone
has heard the information in this forum. The analyst need not figure it
out from a short press release and a 10-minute follow-up.
When a company supports a pre-announcement with a conference call,
the odds are that the stock will decline less than it otherwise would have.
The signal also goes out that management is visible in bad times as well as
good, which is critical.
A Feel for When
Because of The Street’s estimate hypersensitivity, pre-announcements can be
a tricky business.
In the middle of its second quarter, a company in the apparel industry
was on target to hit its estimates, but felt that it would miss the third quarter
and had uncertainty about the full year. Management was reluctant to
change anything. IR urged them to bring down the fourth quarter, even
though they weren’t sure. Management took our advice and the stock
dropped that day.
However, it gave management a slight cushion to focus on the business
and not the stock price, because the new full-year guidance was conservative.
If the company had maintained the original fourth quarter estimate
they would have been in a nail-biting situation for six months, wondering if
estimates were too high. They would also have been in a Reg FD pickle
when asked about their comfort level with annual estimates.
Getting It Right
The approach to pre-announcing must be consistent because the behavior of
management oftentimes, more so than the actual event, will be factored into
long-term valuation.
If a company only pre-announces when there is a material variance from
the consensus estimate, then Wall Street knows that if there’s no pre-release
during any particular quarter, then the company is tracking toward the number. On the other hand, if there’s never a pre-release and the company falls
into a potential “make a quarter, miss a quarter” pattern, Wall Street will be
tentative to get involved and the multiple might suffer. Therefore, to mitigate
volatility and the guessing games on Wall Street, and prevent management
from violating disclosure laws, a consistent pattern of pre-announcing and
refining conservative guidance is recommended. Management can also use
other, non-earnings-oriented releases—for example, an announcement of a
new marketing initiative—to update the market on numbers.
Putting It All Together
The following case study of a real company with a fictional name engaging
in the delivery stage of IR illustrates how consistent and conservative earnings
guidance, combined with pre-announcements and the right message,
completely engaged Wall Street via research and the morning meeting, created
commission business, made management look great, and drove the
multiple to premium status.
Rebuilding Credibility
Orange Foods was a large restaurant chain that had a history of inconsistent
performance relative to earnings expectations. They’d hit their
number and then lowered guidance regularly. Analysts were generally
negative on the company because of this inconsistency, and management
was universally perceived as not managing The Street properly.
Orange Foods began working with our IR team on October 1,
2001. The assessment of the problem was that the CEO was very
wrapped up in communicating a growth story on par with the best of
the industry, rather than acknowledging the limitations of his own concept.
In reality, this company just wasn’t capable of hyper-growth despite
its underlying quality, reputations, and brand.
This unrealistic communication led IR to plot a more conservative
strategy. On October 24, management took the advice and formally
brought earnings guidance down again. Only this time, it was not a
small adjustment. IR suggested lowering guidance by at least 20 percent.
The IR advisors told management that the stock would likely drop
materially and, in fact, that happened. It sparked the following comments
from four analysts:
(continued)
Analyst A: “Orange Foods reported Q3 earnings that were $0.01
below our estimate and more importantly revised Q4’01 and FY 2002
downward. Orange Foods cited choppy sales and margin pressure. We
are revising our estimates downward although our 2002 estimate is at
the top of the company’s revised range. We reiterate Buy rating.”
Analyst B: “We are lowering estimates and our rating to Market
Perform from Buy. Orange Foods trades at 24.9x our 2002 EPS estimate
and a discount to the group multiple of 30.7x”
Analyst C: “Despite drastic and likely conservative stance by management,
we are maintaining our BUY rating (although lowering estimates)
given that the new guidance will likely become immediately embedded
in the stock—moving it to relatively attractive valuation levels.”
And then there was this:
Analyst D: “We are reducing our rating from Strong Buy to Buy. Although
the guidance reduction is more aggressive than we believe is necessary,
we prefer to have a base to work with and be in position to only
make positive changes to our EPS estimates as our analysis dictates.”
Analyst D offered IR’s desired result. Despite an initial 15 percent
dip in the stock price, management was now viewed by the sell-side as
conservative rather than aggressive, and all of the analysts revised their
estimates to the exact range set by management.
Though two of the analysts lowered their rating, there seemed to be
an awareness that the estimates were conservative. The helpful observation,
especially to institutional investors, was that Orange Foods was
trading at a discount to its peers.
Most rewarding, between the lines of what they wrote, both analysts
C and D were telling investors to take a second look at the stock
despite the ratings downgrade in Analyst D’s case. These situations
make a company interesting to Wall Street.
A month later, in November 2001, several analysts wanted management
out on the road to visit investors. Why? Because the stock’s
risk profile had been greatly reduced, thanks to conservative guidance.
The sell-side knew it and felt comfortable that management was positioned
to meet or exceed estimates for the next few quarters. Because
analysts’ credibility is linked to the companies they bring to investors on
non-deal road shows, they always look for companies with conservative
estimates—that is, stocks that are Buys.
This stock was now a Buy largely because of management’s own actions. The new conservative guidance was responsible for the analysts
having a higher level of conviction in their writing and when talking
to their sales force or to investors.
Analyst C, who took management to buyers in early November,
said, “We hosted Orange Foods management in San Francisco and
Denver earlier this week. Despite recently lowered FY 2002 outlook
and some near-term loss of top-line momentum, we still believe that the
underlying business model is robust, providing ample, high return
growth for several more years. Our $0.80 FY 2002 EPS estimate is
predicated on 1% comps and should prove conservative.”
Conservative guidance also brought new analysts to the table because
they knew their chances of being wrong on their recommendation
were very low. Accordingly, another analyst, Analyst E, launched
coverage in November and said, “We are enthusiastic about the longerterm
prospects for the stock, but believe an increase in consensus EPS
estimates will be necessary to move the stock out of its current period
of malaise.” We knew this was more likely than not given the guidance,
meaning management and the analyst would look great as the year
wore on.
In the meantime, IR felt that management was clearly delivering on
expectations. All of the research reports were extremely positive in
their outlook, despite the ratings, and that was what mattered most.
The buy-side worries less about the actual rating then the text.
After all, what’s the difference between Strong Buy, Buy, Accumulate,
or Outperform? These are, as mentioned earlier, investment banking
ratings designed not to offend management teams so that investment
bankers can pitch their wares. The buy-side knows this, and for that
reason they look more at the text and the estimates than the rating. The
moral of the story for the CEO is not to worry about any rating shortterm;
worry about what’s written.
To that point, on December 11, 2001, Analyst D reiterated her Buy
Rating after taking the company out on the road. The analyst wrote:
“Company has news to talk about. We are raising our target price to
$25 and reiterating our BUY Rating.” The analyst also said, “We believe
that our current EPS forecasts for both Q4’01 and FY 2002 are
likely to prove conservative. We are therefore raising our target P/E
multiple to 30x to reflect the company’s return to 30% EPS growth.”
(continued)
This was the first time an analyst had increased the target multiple
for the stock to 30x. Before this, Orange Foods had, despite higher
earnings estimates, been trading at a discount to the group. Here the analyst
argued for 5 extra multiple points on the stock, and with the 20
million shares outstanding, this was an argument that the company was
worth an incremental $100 million.
On January 10, 2002, Analyst D reiterated her Buy Rating again
when Orange Foods announced preliminary Q4 results, confirmed
comfort with the current Q4 EPS estimate range, and established a
range for Q1. In the release IR stated that: “. . . based on these preliminary
results, management is comfortable with fourth quarter
2001 earnings per share guidance at the high end of the previously
announced $0.14 to $0.16 range.” IR also announced that Orange
Foods had “established guidance for the first quarter ended March 31,
2002. Based on current visibility, management expects a first quarter
2002 earnings range of approximately $0.17 to $0.19 per share based
on . . .” Also, “. . . its comfort with previously announced 2002 EPS
guidance of $0.80 to $0.84 per share.”
This announcement allowed IR to share another positive data
point with The Street: that management was comfortable with the previously
announced range. The management sell-side relationship was
blossoming. Analysts who took the company on the road and recommended
a Buy looked great, and investors were happy with management’s
certainty.
Things were even better in reality. Management had set themselves
up to release several positive data points down the road. For one, they
were fairly confident that they would at least hit the very high end of
the fourth quarter range, although it looked as though they might beat
it by a penny. Two, the earnings guidance range set for Q1’02 was very
conservative with virtually no risk. Three, 2002 estimates were conservative
and beatable, if business stayed the same.
Even though the First Call estimates were going up, they were going
up in line with management’s guidance and comfort level. Management
was in full control in this case, never having to worry about the estimate,
meaning fewer phone calls from concerned analysts and buysiders
and more time to run the business, which was invaluable.
“Conservative” in this case meant realistically looking at the business
and factors in management’s control and taking a discount to that
estimate for factors outside of management’s control—factors that inpevitably have an effect every year. These consensus estimates gave Orange
Foods a safety net to deal with unforeseen circumstances.
On January 29, 2002, the company announced Q4’01 EPS a penny
better than the range with which they were comfortable on January 10.
They reiterated conservative guidance for the March quarter, all of fiscal
2002, and fiscal 2003 despite pressure from the sell-side to raise
guidance.
Analyst E maintained the market perform but on valuation only,
cited 30.2x the 2002 estimate, and wrote, “Because Orange Foods is accelerating
its unit growth, margins may be under pressure, creating
slightly above average risk regarding negative EPS surprises.”
Analyst C maintained the Buy. “Estimates for 2002 look conservative.
We believe our ’02 estimate of $0.82 is conservative by at least
5%. Therefore, we continue to believe that EPS estimates will continue
to be upwardly revised.” But he did not raise his estimate, which was
key. He followed management’s guidance, so he and his firm were positioned
to look good. He had a Buy, and he would look great if the company
increased earnings.
Analyst A maintained the Buy Rating, arguing for 30x 2003 $1.01
estimate.
And then another nation was heard from. From a research firm
with no investment banking that, in an effort to gain credibility, only
carried Buy or Sell recommendations, Analyst F recommended a Sell.
He wrote, and this is a Sell recommendation mind you, “We believe
there is minimal earnings risk to the story but the valuation is high.
Shares have rocketed back to 30x consensus. We continue to be a believer
in the long term prospects of the company but would wait for a
more attractive entry point.” Victory for IR and management.
For the first time in awhile, Orange Foods felt it had nothing to
worry about with The Street. They’d kept expectations low, left behind
their traditional “make a quarter, miss a quarter” pattern, and kept several
“arrows in the quiver,” meaning there was a good chance guidance
would increase in the future. Instead of blindly communicating aggressive
guidance at the beginning of the year, management would start off
lower, and as the year went on and results came in, only then would
they raise guidance, and only when they were sure.
This approach would reduce risk materially and attract investor
(continued)
interest. The company might arrive at the same actual earnings at
the end of the year, but the way they got there built credibility and
valuation.
Analyst E wasn’t buying it, however, and felt the chances were
slightly higher than normal for an earnings miss. Behind the scenes, IR
knew this analyst was at risk as Orange Foods would continue to revise
upward throughout the year. Additionally, Analyst F had written what
we read to be a very positive Sell report. The analyst downgraded based
only on valuation and argued to buy on the dips. On the other end of
the spectrum, Analysts A and C had written about how conservative
management was and how consensus would go up over time. This was
very powerful and a direct result of the strategy.
The next month, February 4, a recommendation from Analyst G
caught IR’s eye. This analyst had been following the industry for a long
time and would not recommend a stock if he thought management
credibility or earnings were shaky. Management’s constant reiteration
of conservative quarterly and yearly guidance was the difference. He
raised the stock to a Buy, saying, “We have seen steady improvement in
stores and believe that the company is setting itself up to steadily outperform
on an earnings basis. . . . The bar has been lowered sufficiently
to provide an easy platform for management to exceed.”
In March, another analyst came on board, initiated coverage and
recommended a Buy. Analyst H said, “The balance sheet is sound and
financing is in place, allowing management the ability to execute their
growth plan without raising additional equity.”
This phrase came verbatim from the conference call script. By providing
the analysts with specific, reliable, and quotable information, IR
made it easier for the analysts to write what the company wanted them
to write, and management took control of its Wall Street destiny.
Another analyst covering the stock, Analyst I, wrote a 30-page report
on the company with an Outperform Rating. “Orange Foods is
currently trading at 24.1x our 2002 estimates (stock traded down 20%
recently), a premium valuation, yet one that reflects investor confidence.
. . .” This quote was great and showed a 360-degree turn on
Wall Street. Whereas prior to our engagement with the company, analysts
argued that Orange Foods should trade at a discount to the group,
they were now arguing for a premium valuation to the group. This
stance implied a lower cost of capital, which was key.
Obviously, at this point, the strategy was really taking hold. All of the analysts were speaking very highly of the company regardless of
their ratings. They knew management’s conservative stance on guidance
would ultimately make them look good. Additionally, the quote
from Analyst I showed IR that management was being rewarded with a
higher multiple because they understood how to manage The Street.
In early April, Orange Foods announced that it was comfortable
with the high end of the previously announced range of $0.17 to $0.19
per share for the first quarter ended March 31, 2002. On April 23,
2002, Orange Foods beat that range and announced $0.20 as the quarterly
result. Management knew in early April that $0.20 per share was
very likely, but not guaranteed, and reiterated comfort with the $0.17
to $0.19 per share range to maximize the announcement and generate
two positive data points versus one. One of those announcements, possibly
generating the $0.20 per share, would be perceived as an upside
surprise relative to expectations, although if they earned $0.19 it would
have been viewed positively as well. If $0.20 was the result, analysts
would have a boost and Orange would have created two opportunities
for analysts to share good news with their sales force.
In fact, $0.20 was the ultimate result after the auditors had closed
the books. Analysts raised numbers by $0.01 (the “overage”) and estimates
were revised upward. But management kept a tight leash and
conveyed specific guidance for the upcoming quarter, the full year
2002, and 2003. At this point, the stock hit $26, up from $17 in October,
just six months before.
IR also found that the company now had more buy-and-hold investors
than traders who fed off volatility. The new investor base loved
the slow and steady philosophy. Moreover, the First Call numbers were
still at the range set by management, keeping the stock interesting to
everyone on Wall Street.
In May, two new sell-side firms came in with coverage. Both rated
Orange Foods a Long-Term Buy. More analysts were attracted to Orange
Foods because they knew management was being conservative. If
these analysts thought First Call was too high, they would have thought
twice about risking their reputations and publishing on the stock. If
they did, it would likely have been a lower rating, and the conviction
level most likely would have been suspect. In June another firm initiated
coverage with a Buy recommendation.
(continued)
After initiating strategic IR efforts, Orange Foods’ management team
took control of Wall Street and repositioned its stock conservatively relative
to expectations. As the stocks outperformed, the analysts looked smart, the
buy-side was happy, and management was perceived by investors as savvy,
thereby raising its credibility. The company stayed the course and consistently
matched or overdelivered on what they promised. Finally, this had
vast, positive effects on media coverage and employee morale.
DEFINITION AND DELIVERY
There are many nuances to strategic IR that come together in the delivery
stage. The content, method, and timing of disclosures is a culmination of uncovering
value, building or redefining the investment thesis, and targeting
the landscape in a conservative manner. IR starts with honing in on the definition
and moves on to polish a delivery that is effective, as well as timeand
cost-efficient for management.
On July 2, Orange Foods raised its guidance for the second quarter
from $0.19 to $0.21 to $0.21 to $0.23 per share versus First Call,
which was $0.21. The company also increased full-year 2002 guidance
to $0.85 to $0.88 per share and 2003 guidance to $1.01 to $1.05 per
share. On July 3, Bloomberg’s Starmine service published a report
targeting Orange Foods as one of several companies with the propensity
to surprise on the upside. On July 19, another analyst rated Orange
Foods a new Buy.
On July 23, 2002, Orange Foods posted earnings of $0.23 per
share, achieving the high end of the range. Again they reiterated conservative
2002 and 2003 guidance and encouraged analysts not to
move numbers. Analysts followed suit.
By the end of the year, of the 10 analysts who published Orange
Foods research, 70 percent maintained some form of Buy rating versus
30 percent prior to this strategic IR initiative. All continued to be
within the desired First Call range, and the analysts benefited greatly as
Orange Foods rounded out the year beating numbers for three consecutive
quarters.
Commissions were generated for the sell-side, returns were generated
for the buy-side, and credibility (and plenty of it) was generated
for the CEO & CFO. Based on this performance, these executives
would be candidates to eventually move on to bigger public companies
and really build their careers and personal wealth.
Once IR and management have determined conservative earnings guidance,
a target audience, a uniform approach with PR, and all the necessary infrastructure
and disclosure needs, the stage is set for delivery. The basics of
delivery are earnings announcements, conference calls, and pre-announcements.
Long-term investors manage their risk by assessing management performance
as frequently as possible. They like to know what they can expect
and when they can expect it. Moreover, if things are going to materially
change from what’s expected, these money managers want to know as soon
as possible. Predictability is good, surprise is bad, and when it comes to performance,
the pattern of delivery can sometimes be as important as the actual
results.
To that end, earnings announcements should never be a big surprise, especially
if the company has established guidance and committed to refining
that guidance throughout the year.
But even with the most conservative guidance, some factors are still out
of management’s control, such as the weather or the economy. Even under
negative circumstances there are always ways to make bad events not so
bad. The ways and means of disclosure can have a profound effect on valuation
over time.
EARNINGS ANNOUNCEMENTS
IR must make its company’s story stand out above the thousands of publicly
traded companies that interact with Wall Street everyday. To do this, to
make an initial contact interesting, IR must reach out and grab the audience.
The most basic piece of the delivery stage is the earnings release, the vehicle
through which quarterly earnings results are expressed and distributed
to investors. Because the majority of public companies are on a calendar
year, the announcements are usually clustered around the same four periods
each year (late April/early May, late July/early August, late October/early
November, and February/March), with the sell- and buy-sides geared up to
handle the high volumes of information in these short windows. Because the
volumes of reporting companies are so large, analysts look to quickly review
the press release, take from it the key points, and move on to the next reporting
company. The release must be concise, contain only the most important
information, and supply a dose of context with a brief management
comment. It must also include financial tables—outlining results and any
other information that management believes will help shareholders better
analyze the company.
Content
The earnings release is widely distributed to the buy-side, the sell-side, and
the financial media. (Appendix A offers two examples of earnings releases.)
As with any press release, the headline describes the purpose of the release
and should act as a hook to draw investors’ and analysts’ attention
(“Octagon Inc. Reports Third-Quarter Financial Results”). The subheads
should highlight the quarterly performance and/or the most material content
in the release: “Exceeds First Call Earnings Per Share by 23% / Management
Raises Guidance for Fiscal 2004.” These subheads are important because
the news wires tend to pick them up and highlight them. In the above example,
everyone is aware that Octagon beat its earnings estimate significantly
and that the full-year expectations are being increased. If the increased guidance
portion of the release had not been packaged as a subhead, however,
odds are high that the media outlets might have ignored this very material
piece of information.
The second part of the release should include bulleted highlights from
the quarter, such as revenue growth over the prior period, EBITDA if appropriate,
Free Cash Flow, new customers acquired during the quarter, and
anything else management believes is a critical driver of the business. However,
the limit is about five items, so IROs should prioritize and settle on
metrics that the analyst and portfolio manager would want, not necessarily
items of which management is most proud. The key here is to deliver the
right message in a succinct fashion.
After the highlights, a quick paragraph can appear describing the results
for the quarter as they relate to revenues, net income, and diluted earnings
per share, and the year-over-year comparisons. That section should be followed
by a quote from the CEO that talks about the quarter.
Next, a paragraph can outline other drivers for the period, such as new
customer counts, average weekly sales, and strategy points. Still later might
be a paragraph discussing the balance sheet—cash balance, long-term debt,
and shareholder’s equity. The final quote should be from the CEO and is
most effective when talking about strategy and his or her overall vision for
the company and shareholders. Finally, before the financial tables, a guidance
section should appear that addresses the upcoming quarter and the full
year. There should also be a full description of the business in safe-harbor
language that protects forward-looking statements.
Remember that this is only an outline. The final product must be a combination
of IR, management, and legal counsel. However, be succinct and
avoid endless paragraphs of information or language that doesn’t immediately
imbed itself with investors. While too many quotes can also be a distraction,
in the past, they were less important because analysts and investors
could cull the specific information from releases or just call management to
gain additional insight. But subsequent to Reg FD, management must be
more careful about the added color they give in private calls. For that reason,
the release and the quotes are both templates for disclosure, so any direct
word from the company must be deliberate and thought out.
THE CONFERENCE CALL
Conference calls are one of the most common and expected vehicles for
communicating quarterly financial performance. Before Reg FD, an overwhelming
majority of larger companies conducted them, but not every
small-cap company followed suit. These days, nearly every company conducts
them, and all companies Web cast them.
The simultaneous Web cast allows everyone to be on the call, from big
institutional investors to individuals who own 100 shares. It’s an opportunity
to listen to management explain quarterly results and convey their vision
of the future. More importantly, because it reaches the masses, the conference
call and Web cast function as the company’s disclosure template until
the next quarterly call. In other words, if it’s discussed on the conference
call, on record, the CEO, CFO, or IRO can talk about it on private phone
calls, at exclusive Wall Street conferences, or in one-on-one meetings. The
conference call is the ultimate safety net for Reg FD.
In terms of structure and content for the call, the first section should be
an introduction from the IRO or legal counsel that includes who will be on
the call, what topics will be covered, and a reading of the Safe Harbor language
that protects the company should actual performance not match fore-
Delivering the Goods 163
casts. This section should be followed by the CEO, who discusses the quarter
in general, and addresses mostly qualitative initiatives that went on during
the three month period. Next up is the CFO who discusses in great detail
the top-line and its drivers, a line-by-line examination of expenses (not only
as a percentage of sales but versus the prior-year period), a balance sheet review,
and guidance. Finally, the CEO wraps up the call, but before Q&A, he
or she should comment on strategies and plans for the upcoming quarter
and year and leave the audience with three or four points why the company
is interesting at this particular point in time.
Analysts and portfolio managers know that the conference call is the
most efficient and effective way for management to communicate with The
Street, and because of this importance, the calls must always be scripted,
with topics and speakers specified and limited.
Scripting the Call
Part of the analyst’s job is to distill the company’s message into a persuasive
and credible opinion and share that view with clients in the investment community.
Therefore, IR should draft the conference call script with this perspective
in mind.
The IR professional should ask, If I could write the analyst report after
the call, how would it look?
This approach underscores the necessity for making key points and
highlighting the positives of the business in a way that the analyst and portfolio
manager are used to seeing. To that point, the script must be realistic
and credible, but take license to discuss strategic or operational initiatives
with enthusiasm. The hope is that these highlights make their way to analysts
in the next morning’s First Call notes in the same manner that they
were presented. In fact, that’s the entire goal of the call: getting management’s
exact point of view in the analysts’ research coverage, and having
them understand and buy into the strategy, all while keeping their First Call
estimates within management’s range.
As stated, the number-one rule for conference calls is that every word
must be scripted. In fact, management should begin preparing the script,
with IR, about three weeks in advance so that the CEO and CFO are fully
prepared. Why script every word? Because the call should last only 20 to 30
minutes, and without the script CEOs can frequently get off message and
speak in tangents about issues that may not be relevant to the call. In that
case, management has just wasted one of its four annual earnings calls by
rambling and looking unprepared. Our hunch is that analysts and portfolio
managers will pick up on that fact and think twice about getting involved.
Staying on script is also essential because today’s conference calls are
transcribed, widely distributed, and scrutinized. Oftentimes, portfolio managers
want to read the conference call transcript, hear about progress from
management directly, and check that view with the sell-side. That’s why
scripting each word, rather than working off bullet points or ad-libbing, is
necessary. Transcripts are a new form of research report complete with estimates
from management, and it’s a huge advantage if IR views it as such.
(Appendix B offers an example of a conference call script.)
Writing the script is a process that includes the following steps:
Management discussions: Executives are constantly crunched for time,
and SEC requirements don’t help that process at quarter’s end. IR’s lead on
preparing for the conference call helps management begin the process and
avoid mistakes that can accompany a last-minute rush.
Therefore, three or four weeks before the call, IR should talk to the
CEO and CFO, review the performance for the quarter, and determine what
topics will be most relevant for the call. These would include strategic issues,
financial performance, and a recap of material announcements during the
period. Once discussed and approved, IR then has an idea of what management
believes is important or material to communicate.
Also, although other departments within the company should not speak
on the actual call, they should be represented. For example, if an important
marketing initiative is launching in the second half of the year, it should be
discussed and scripted into the appropriate section. Or if the controller
has a better interpretation of why an important expense line-item didn’t
meet expectations, it can be discussed with IR and incorporated. When
senior management can speak in detail to these issues, analysts are impressed
and left with the perception that management is very much in-tune
with the business and running a tight ship. The comfort level that affords investors
is so highly coveted by sell- and buy-side analysts that a premium
multiple is often paid for stocks where management is communicating at
such proficient levels.
During the internal due diligence, IR has to set the tone of the call and
judge everything relative to valuation. Much information will be contributed
from the definition stage, but it’s always worth a quick revisit as definition
can change frequently, in tandem with stock movements. For example, if
things are going poorly for a company and the stock is already down, the
strategy for the conference call is very different than if the news is bad and
the stock is at a 52-week high. Capital markets experience and expertise can
tell management in what context to deliver the news.
Street recon: IR that is tapped into Wall Street perceptions already knows the overarching messages that should be stressed or defended in any
given quarter and will incorporate it with the messages that come from the
original meeting with management.
IR should query as to the specific concerns that analysts and investors
have regarding the company—for example, recent expense escalations, offbalance-
sheet debt, or the effectiveness of a certain marketing campaign.
Also, IR that has the connections to seek out and understand the “bear
story” on a company is invaluable and allows management to address specific
negatives on each call.
The process of collecting information from analysts or portfolio managers
can be very difficult, however, in that Wall Street professionals have
little time to share their perceptions, particularly around earnings season.
Accordingly, IR must build long-standing relationships, and capital markets
knowledge increases the odds that those relationships will develop.
Talking the language of the portfolio manager or analyst is the best way to
start an intelligent dialogue, garner real feedback, and pass it on unfiltered
to management.
Writing the drafts: Once IR has spoken to management and the outside
world, it should take the lead in writing the conference call script, adhere to
an agreed-upon format, and deliver the initial draft to the CEO and CFO
within a preset schedule.
For example, about a week after the initial meeting with management,
IR should have a first draft of the release and script ready to go. 48 hours
later, management should agree to give comments back to IR, and the whole
process should be repeated as the financials come together and the auditors
do their job.
Then, about a week before the call, the conference call invitation
should be sent to the wire utilizing the distribution list that was compiled in
the earlier stages of delivery. Once the CEO, the CFO, and IR have turned
two or three drafts of the script, with each party adding and subtracting
ideas, the final draft should be shown to legal and the audit committee for
final approval.
Being proactive: IR and management must collectively decide which issues
to emphasize during the quarter. IR may encourage a reluctant management
team to discuss a tough issue in the script rather than address it in
Q&A because it’s a proactive way to control the information and mitigate
risk. If, for example, the issue is ignored in the script because the CEO deems
it too uncomfortable to discuss, she may find herself off balance in Q&A,
fumbling for an answer that’s scribbled down on a cheat sheet. If scripted
from the beginning, however, the CEO can simply refer back to her prepared
remarks on the topic and move on to the next question. An example of a tough issue for a CEO might be downward margin trends in the face of rising
sales or the loss of a major customer or why the company doesn’t give
guidance. Allowing sophisticated portfolio managers or analysts to lead a
company down a line of questioning that the CEO is already uncomfortable
with can only make management look bad, and unfortunately the entire dialogue
will be transcribed for the world to see. That’s too much risk, and
there’s no reason to incur it.
Be prepared: Given the opportunity to be extemporaneous and not follow
a script, management might get off message and use a phrase, or even a
qualifier like “significant,” to describe a new initiative. A simple word or
nuance can send an unintended signal to analysts and portfolio managers
who are trained to quantify everything they hear from management. For example,
on a conference call, management might be talking about an initiative
for the upcoming year, and although it won’t be a contributor to earnings,
the CEO who’s not scripted might say, “it’s going to be a significant
part of our business going forward.” This might encourage analysts to incorporate
the new business line into their models and increase their earnings
estimates. If this unwanted analysis skews the average First Call estimate
upward, the company has just put itself in position to miss estimates. For
these reasons, management must be very careful even with what it believes
is mundane language.
Therefore, the point of a script is to stick to it, and management and IR
should practice to ensure that the executives can deliver the prepared remarks
with familiarity and ease. Additionally, IR should know, from its
Street reconnaissance and industry knowledge, the questions that are likely
to be asked. These questions can be subtly addressed in the script with some
pre-emptive language to nullify the question altogether. At the very least,
they should be written and reviewed so that management can prep for the
interaction.
In this preparation, IR should highlight specific talking points, as well as
issues to avoid, so that management can steer back to port if the call gets
bumpy. Preparation helps management present well and build credibility,
which is the name of the game when it comes to valuation. Ultimately, the
CEO and the CFO must come across as confident, answer all questions thoroughly,
and articulate a clear vision for the future.
Front and Center: Topics and Their Speakers
The voices on the conference call become the public voices of the company,
and the public role of the company executives should reflect their jobs.
Therefore, have two or three speakers at most represent the company. The first is the CEO. Not too many investors would buy a stock without listening
to, if not sitting down in person with, the CEO. The next individual
on the call might be the chief operating officer, who handles the day-to-day
operations. Finally the CFO should be on the call.
On an obvious level, this introduces the sell- and buy-sides to the executives
in charge, putting a voice to the vision, operations, and numbers. On
a subliminal level, it shows a cohesive, connected team in which the members
understand the business and their roles. By giving each executive specific
issues to cover, IR helps senior management put their best face forward
to The Street.
For purposes of disclosure and liability the company should be very particular
about who is on the call and who will interact with the investment
community on a day-to-day basis. One of the oldest analyst techniques is to
call different executives in the company—the CEO, the COO, and then the
CFO—and ask the same few questions to each, and look for points of discrepancy
that reveal incremental information.
To avoid this, a formal policy should be in place. The best analogy to
help clients understand the ramifications of no policy is to imagine the conference
call as a trial. If IR is the defense attorney, he must decide who will
be put on the witness stand. There are pros and cons for each person. For
example, it would be great to have the head of marketing explain the new
program for the upcoming year or the head of human resources talk about
the latest batch of hires. Better yet, the head of technology could talk about
the new Web initiative. Of course, if only IR were doing the questioning
after prepared remarks, it would be an easy choice to let these people speak,
but the line is filled with money managers, hedge funds, and short sellers.
Much like a trial, allowing someone to speak during prepared remarks
opens them up to questioning on the conference call, phone calls after the
conference call, and potentially questions during the quarter via email or
phone. The head of marketing would be viewed as another company source
from whom to gather information, and analysts and portfolio managers may
start calling multiple senior-level workers within the company. Therefore, to
control the information that is directed to Wall Street, IROs must limit the
number of participants on the call and make sure everyone has a unified
message, particularly intra-quarter.
What to Watch For on Conference Calls
Conference calls can succeed or fail for several reasons, and success relies on
preparation and management’s ability to hone in on content and delivery.
For analysts and portfolio managers, some things just don’t sit well.
Tell just enough: A company that spends five minutes on prepared remarks
and leaves the rest to Q&A gives too much room for analyst interpretation.
It can also send a message that the company isn’t taking the call
seriously or that they’d rather not share their information. On the other side
of the spectrum, a company that spends 45 minutes on prepared remarks is
simply taking up too much time, and that drain prevents investors and analyst
from participating in a Q&A session afterward, which is critical. Fortyfive
minutes shows that a company doesn’t know how to concisely tell its
story to the world. When in doubt, companies that want to disclose many
variables should put them in a supplemental disclosure section of the press
release for all to see.
Stay on point: The script should help management address specific topics
and avoid irrelevant or confusing tangents and trouble spots. Executives
must spend time on the focus of the call, possibly an earnings miss, in great
detail, before moving on to strategy and the company’s outlook. Glossing
over these points positions the CEO as unrealistic and a potential investment
risk. That’s why the script, with related investment community feedback
built in, is so important.
Don’t hype: Executives work hard all year with few moments to stand
up and garner recognition for the company’s operating results. The call may
seem like the perfect time for this, although in actuality, it’s not the right
forum. Management must allow the analysts and portfolio managers to
characterize the performance. Management should keep it somewhat matter
of fact and stay even-keel, whether times are good or bad. The Street wants
to hear the explanation behind recent performance and the essence of what
will happen for the remainder of the year.
Don’t hide: Regardless if the management team decides to be proactive
or not in the script, problems can’t be glossed over. Executives who talk
about positive issues when a big negative is looming are making a big mistake
and jeopardizing their own credibility. Management should state the
facts, the reasons behind them, and the actions being taken to fix the problem.
Management shouldn’t take the siutation personally because quarterly
misses happen every day on Wall Street. Management should be up-front
and overly available. How a management team handles the bad times on
their conference calls can define their public company careers and be a major
determinant of valuation.
Watch words: As stated earlier, it’s not just what is said, it’s how it’s said.
In conference calls, the littlest things might matter the most. The Street always
pays close attention to nuance, innuendo, and tone. Their job is to
quantify everything that management says, and determine what that means
to EPS.
Believe it or not, a certain word or a shift in tone or inflection can affect
the interpretation of information and shift the investor’s mindset up or
down. The difference between “very good” and “good” has meaning to the
analyst and portfolio manager. If these words are not quantified, the meanings
can be widely interpreted.
Analysts and portfolio managers cringe when they hear certain words or
phrases. Phrases such as “explosive earnings” or “our guidance might prove
to be very conservative” can ruin IR’s plan. The phrases are factored into the
share price immediately and many times set an unintended bar by which
management will be judged.
Dealing with shorts on the call: Short sellers are not necessarily the
enemy, although they certainly don’t brighten management’s day. They are
usually short-term players who have made a bet against the company because
the stock has increased in value, and in their minds the earnings don’t
justify the multiple. There’s risk involved in shorting stocks, however, so if
they borrow and sell short, they’ve probably done some solid research to arrive
at their bearish opinion.
If IR knows that the short interest in the stock is high, they need to prepare
the script with proactive explanations that address each point of the bear
story. Because the company does not want to enter a public debate on a conference
call, short sellers should not be confronted. Management should simply
put forth its counterarguments and then, if necessary, agree to disagree.
Although someone betting against management can lead to an emotional
situation, executives need to be matter-of-fact on the call and understand
that it’s not personal. The shorts may think the company is great, just
too expensive. Or they may be making a short-term bet. At the end of the
day, however, management shouldn’t waste time confronting short sellers on
the call. Delivering solid EPS growth over time is the only way to send these
players on their way.
Other Interested Parties
The earnings announcement and conference call typically get beyond the
sell-side and the buy-side. In fact, there are several constituencies to consider,
and management should have a systematic procedure in place to disseminate
and explain the quarterly information.
Stakeholders: Employees, vendors, and customers should be notified
first and foremost on any important company news. The employees are the
heart and soul of any organization, and one way to keep them motivated is
to keep them involved and educated. Any procedure for communication
should include an internal process that precedes, within Regulation FD constraints,
the external one. The CEO, not the local media or the Internet,
should be the first source of information for employees on company news.
If it’s feasible, and if it would underscore goodwill in a relationship,
strategic partners such as vendors and customers should also have an announcement
tailored toward them. An announcement after the market
closes and moments before the call to The Street keeps the team in sync. This
is especially important if it’s a cost-cutting measure or a merger that will result
in the closing of certain operations or layoffs. No one wants to hear
about their plant closing on the radio in the carpool.
Other agencies: Sometimes additional phone calls are required following
the announcement. A company with a pending lawsuit was about to announce
the judgment. IR called NASDAQ and told them to halt trading;
then the company made the announcement. The judgment was going to be
considered material to shareholders, and trading volume would definitely be
affected. To encourage an orderly market and decrease volatility, IR wanted
to make sure the news was evenly disseminated.
IR’s responsibility is to know who has to be called and when on any announcement
that may have a consequence for that agency, even if the market
is closed.
It’s All in the Timing
Just as important as the content and structure of the release and conference
call is the timing. Many companies may not give the issue much thought, but
it’s an important part of reducing risk in the overall communications
process.
Analysts see companies release their earnings throughout the day. Some
would be the first ones out at 7:00 a.m., others at 11:00 a.m., a few at 3:00
p.m., and many at 4:00 p.m. or later. The subsequent conference calls might
also be scattered throughout the day. This shotgun approach just isn’t
smart, and IR should take control of the process and educate management
on timing.
The first series of checks IR should make are to competitors’ schedules.
Look on any of the information services and determine when the competition
is reporting. Most companies make that information public well in advance.
If they don’t, IR might look at prior-year releases to get a feel for timing.
Once a reporting grid is composed, IR should evaluate timing with
management and pick a release date that’s relatively vacant from peer reporting.
There’s no need to rush. It’s more important to be ready, on a date
when none of management’s competitors will be releasing results.
Rushing to get auditors in and out so that earnings can be reported
quickly just doesn’t seem to make sense, particularly in the new age of information.
In fact, there are no negative ramifications of reporting four
weeks after the quarter closes rather than three. The better route is to take
the time to ensure that results are accurate, sign off on them feeling confident,
script the call, practice Q&A, and listen to other industry calls. To that
last point, reporting later rather than sooner gives IR and management time
to gather competitive information by listening to other industry conference
calls. IR can read each competitor’s release and conference call transcript
and get a feel for industry results as well as perceptions and tones on Wall
Street. As a result, management is more prepared, and the risk of surprise is
materially reduced. Therefore, being one of the last companies in an industry
to report can be a good thing. If there is a risk in waiting, however, it
would manifest itself during a quarter where peers are reporting bad news.
Under this circumstance, the company’s stock would likely trade down with
the group before it has a chance to put out its earnings and control the information.
Pre-announcements can take care of this problem, a topic that is
addressed later in the chapter.
So how about time of day?
Many companies report earnings in the morning before the market
opens at 9:30 a.m., then conduct their conference call at 11 a.m. Better yet,
some companies release earnings at 11 a.m. and conduct the call at 1 p.m. In
theory, management probably thinks that it would lose the audience if it reported
either before the market opened or after it closed. That theory, however,
is just a guess on management’s part, and IR should do some educating
based on its capital markets perspective.
When the earnings release hits the tape during market hours—let’s say,
11 a.m.—traders, institutional salespeople, and investors immediately call
the analyst to decipher the information. Since the analyst hasn’t talked to
management yet, and legally cannot until the conference call because of disclosure
issues, they really can’t give an informed opinion to the world.
“[XYZ Company] is planning to report its 16 week Q1:04 EPS before
the market open on May 13, with its conference call after the close.
The gap between the EPS press release and the conference call could
create material volatility during the day of May 13 if there are ambiguities
in the press release.”
—From an analyst’s email, April 28, 2004.
Therefore, the trading desk will make a snap judgment on its stock position
without company comment and without analyst comment. With that
judgment can come volatility in the stock. This process becomes even more
complex when the earnings release is complicated. If Reuters or Bloomberg
picks up the wrong headline or misinterprets the release, for example, the
market may move unnecessarily, which can have a serious effect on the stock
price, and whipsaw shareholders.
Companies should distribute their releases and conduct their conference
calls after the market closes. Specifically, the announcement should hit the
tape at 4:01pm and the call should start at 4:30 p.m. or 5:00 p.m. EST.
This method is good for several reasons, including the fact that there’s
less distraction on the trading floor and less opportunity for an unnecessary
reaction, based on a confusing release. For example, a retailer might have inventory
levels that appear higher than sales can sustain. Investors who see
this on the balance sheet might hit the sell button if the release is distributed
during market hours, prior to a conference call. But if the market is closed
and the company has a chance to explain that these inventory levels are built
into the projections for new store openings, investors may hesitate before
selling the stock, or not sell it at all.
The other advantage of distributing the release after the market closes is
that the sell-side has time to collect its thoughts, ask management questions,
and prepare a written conclusion for their First Call update. During the day,
the analyst is barraged with calls, the market is open, and the stock freely
moves as the conference call is being conducted. In addition, traders may be
out to lunch and institutional salespeople may be focused on other ideas or
they may be escorting management teams to buy-side meetings. In other
words, the release and the subsequent analyst call are diluted in the commotion
of the day. If the market is closed, none of these issues are present
and management is maximizing the opportunity to tell its story in a risk-free
environment.
Therefore, understanding the atmosphere on the other side of the capital
markets, the life of the portfolio manager, and the day of the sell-side analyst
helps to clarify why IR should choose this approach. To further maximize
the effort, it’s extremely beneficial to understand how the day of the
sell-side begins.
The Morning Meeting
To truly understand the analysts, their obligations, and their relationships
with the sales force, one has to understand the morning meeting at an investment
bank.
The morning meeting is the primary means of formal communication
between an analyst and the institutional sales force. This is ultimately where
investment ideas are introduced, debated, and delivered. For example, the
analyst makes his/her argument to buy or sell a stock, and if it’s persuasive,
the sales force, which can number from 10 to 50 individuals, will pick up
their phones and call roughly 10 or more institutional investors each (Fidelity,
Putnam, and Capital Research to name a few). This communication
channel is very powerful, to say the least, and one that IROs should take advantage
of.
Every day, Monday through Friday, from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. or thereabouts,
investment banks and brokerage firms conduct the morning meeting.
Picture a large trading floor, fluorescent lights, rows of desks, stacks of
computer screens, and the buzz of suits and skirts adjusting their headsets,
folding their newspapers, finishing off their coffee, getting ready for the day.
At the front of the room is a podium with a microphone that will connect
the speaker’s voice to the vast network of salespeople who listen to the investment
bank’s ideas on any given morning.
Controlling the proceedings is a facilitator, the morning meeting gatekeeper.
He runs the show on a daily basis, and along with the director of research
preselects a handful of analysts to present their ideas each day. Competition
to present one of those ideas is fierce, and analysts must lobby for a
spot on the schedule. This selection is important to analysts for a couple of
reasons. First, getting on the morning meeting and having their investment
ideas supported by the sales force makes a name for the analyst among institutions,
and these institutions vote for analysts and determine a portion of
their compensation. Second, being on the morning meeting means that the
analyst in question is most likely upping or lowering their rating on a stock,
and those actions facilitate commission business on the trading desk. Again,
this is a determinant of analyst compensation. Therefore, the analyst is always
looking for undervalued or overvalued ideas and to bring those ideas
to the morning meeting.
So the key for IR is to understand the analyst’s mentality and find a way
to be one of those few Buy ideas on the morning meeting. That’s how to fully
maximize an earnings release and conference call and how to maximize the
relationship with any investment bank.
The first lesson on how to make the cut for the morning meeting is to be
an undervalued, interesting company with trusted management. Hold-rated
stocks aren’t presented in the morning meeting. Why? Because, a Hold rating
doesn’t generate a nickel of commission business. Therefore, it’s imperative
to be a Buy.
Getting to the Buy Rating
Positioning a stock as a Buy rating is the reason that IR must go to such
lengths in the definition stage to craft a message and package it in the way
analysts and investors can relate. The objective is to have it play out something
like this:
IR joins a quirky consumer company, refines its comp group, and determines
that it should be valued on EBITDA versus earnings. It’s a more accurate
valuation method for this capital-intensive company and casts it as undervalued
in the new peer group. Then, IR garners feedback from
management, the buy-side, and industry sources, drafts the earnings release
and conference call script, and prepares thoroughly for Q&A. IR, along
with management, also sets conservative guidance and conducts the conference
call at 5 p.m. EST, thereby controlling the dissemination information.
After the call, the analyst likes management and their approach and
views the numbers as conservative relative to the peer group. With time to
collect his or her thoughts, a well-thought-out research report is written, incorporating
management’s conservative guidance. Given the fact that estimates
are low, a great argument can be made that the stock is a Buy. The analyst
lobbies the gatekeeper to get his or her idea on the morning meeting,
and because management and IR have packaged the product conservatively
in both the release and the call, the green light is given and the analyst is
awarded the lead-off spot for the morning meeting.
The result: IR, along with management, has almost made the stock a
Buy through a strategic approach that fully understands how an investment
bank operates. If these practices are followed every quarter, particularly conservative
guidance, the institutional profile of the company will no doubt be
raised, volume will likely increase, and a higher valuation will ensue.
On the other hand, a promotional management team with aggressive
guidance doesn’t stand a chance of getting on the morning meeting because
of the increased risk to earnings estimates. The institutional sales force and
the buy-side will rarely support the stock when management has established
a pattern that is not conservative. There’s just too high a risk of losing
money. Whereas in the case above, management has essentially made the analyst
look good to the sales force because earnings are positioned to exceed
guidance. This in turn generates a buying opportunity and commissions for
the analyst’s firm. For the company, the multiple increased and the cost of
capital declined.
Had the company stretched with its guidance and released earnings during
the day, the stock would have immediately moved to a level commensurate with the perceived risk to earnings, and by the next morning there
would have been no investment call to make.
Putting It Together
Here are a couple of examples of how the entire process works.
Zippa!, the popular apparel brand mentioned earlier, discovered after
the IR audit that not only wasn’t it being clear in its definition, specifically
with regard to its product diversification, but that it hadn’t clearly communicated
this reality to The Street. Once the company had packaged this “new
product” for the investment community and established earnings guidance,
IR scripted a call that would clarify their old-to-them, but new-to-The-
Street, position.
After delivering the new message, backed up by numbers, in an aftermarket-
hours conference call, analysts walked away with a new understanding
of Zippa!. The company was clearer about its business and conservative
in its guidance. New analysts picked up coverage and delivered the
new thesis, old analysts changed their views, and despite the fact that Zippa!
missed its sales estimate, the stock increased nearly 20 percent the day after
the call. The PR group was thus positioned for positive stories in the media,
articles that could speak to the financial strengths and diversity of the business.
This approach took much of the risk perception out of the stock. None
of this was new, nothing had changed with regard to the way the company
did business. It was just delivering the critical information to Wall Street in
a way it could understand. Erasing the disconnect between perception and
reality.
After the call, several analysts called to thank the IR team, saying it was
one of the best messages they’d ever heard. Analysts and investors had unknowingly
foundered when it came to Zippa!, although the fault was really
in the company’s historic communications practices. IR made the analysts’
job much easier because issues were formally addressed in an open forum
with plenty of time for questions and answers. With access to new information
that before wasn’t readily available, the investment community recognized
a new positioning for Zippa!, right up there with a more mature,
global businesses. The conference call improved The Street’s perception of
the company, took risk out of the stock, and positioned it for a higher multiple,
creating tens of millions of dollars in value for shareholders.
Soft Sofas, a company in the home furnishings sector, had slow sales one
quarter and achieved Wall Street’s expectations only through a one-time gain
because of an asset sale. This result was technically a miss and would be viewed negatively by analysts. They began their conference call talking
about new initiatives and glossing over the financials. Big mistake.
The analysts and portfolio managers on the call, professionals at dissecting
financials, took notice. Management obviously missed estimates and
was trying to take attention away from that fact. Nothing could penalize
management more, and the odds that Soft Sofa would get on any morning
meeting schedule at any investment bank for the foreseeable future were seriously
jeopardized (other than as a Sell recommendation).
Soft Sofas should have started the conference call by announcing that
sales were down and then talk about the problems that contributed to this
slump and what factors were offsetting hoped-for growth. If management
had acknowledged the problem, identified its source, and given new guidance,
Wall Street would have handicapped the company’s ability to fix the
problem, lowered estimates, and if the stock dropped materially, had the
analyst on the morning meeting schedule to talk about the equity as undervalued.
By communicating this understanding, along with a strategy for
change, management could have built the kind of credibility that can never
be attained by trying to avoid issues with hype.
PRE-ANNOUNCEMENTS
The last agenda item on delivery is the pre-announcement. Management
competency is measured by more than the strategic vision to build a business;
it also includes the ability to understand the audience and communicate
the business. As far as Wall Street is concerned, earnings guidance is a
great indicator of management capacity because it tests the budgeting and
forecasting process and shows that management isn’t afraid to set the bar for
performance.
Granted, Wall Street also understands that factors beyond management’s
control cause earnings to drop. When the problem is the economy,
the weather, competition, or a national security incident, an earnings miss is
usually explainable. What is not easy to explain, however, are hiccups in the
core business where management should have had control. Managing the
unexpected is part of the job, and management that has been conservative in
setting the bar, even if it means a lower short-term stock price, has given its
estimates breathing room to deal with the unexpected.
The reason the market rewards upward earnings revisions is the perception,
right or wrong, that the executives are operationally sound and that systems
are in place to measure and predict financial performance. Wall Street
101: the market likes predictability and certainty, not risk and volatility.
Take, for example, this quote from a March 18, 2004, analyst’s report
on a restaurant conglomerate. “We have low confidence in our EPS estimate
of $1.46 and $1.56 for FY04 and FY05 respectively, due in part to management’s
frequent guidance revisions, none provided in press release, and also
to the ongoing and much discussed traffic volatility at (one of the company’s
restaurants).” The analyst maintained his Hold rating.
Missing estimates also puts the analyst in a precarious position. In addition
to his own research, the analyst counts on management for reliable
guidance, and if credible, the sales force and investors also buy into those
numbers. If a company misses estimates during a quarter and the earnings
are trending lower, the analyst is going to lose credibility when the quarter
sinks beneath them. Though a number that materially beats estimates is positive
for investors in the short term, any experienced analyst will wonder
how well management is able to forecast.
Missing the Number, but Mitigating the Penalty
“Weaker than expected earnings” was the key phrase. A trader was quoted
in the article, saying: “Frankly, expectations were too high. Companies
haven’t released many pre-earnings announcements and analysts were backing
out numbers, and no one was telling them otherwise.”
If, during the quarter, management can see that the company is going to
materially miss or exceed earnings estimates, the best thing to do is to preannounce
a new guidance range as soon as possible. Getting information
out early, in good times and bad, keeps Wall Street in the loop while minimizing
surprises. And yet, while we recognize management’s obligation to
get news out as soon as they know about changes, releasing news too early
can be costly. For example, if business is trending down during the quarter
and halfway through the three-month period management revises guidance,
that’s fine—unless the company misses revised guidance, which is totally
unacceptable. Therefore, management should wait until three-quarters of
the quarter has passed, when a tangible range is known. That way, management
is not adjusting guidance without feeling 99 percent confident in
the new range.
“The tech stock rally deflated yesterday due to weaker than expected
earnings from [a Web commerce company] that torpedoed the sector
on fears that similar companies were overvalued.”
—The New York Times, October 2001.
The second part of any pre-announcement strategy is announcing the
date and time of the earnings call, probably three or four weeks later, and
making sure that it’s clear that annual guidance will be addressed again at
that time. Why is this important? If, for example, management brings down
second quarter guidance on May 30th, a month before the end of the quarter,
with no corresponding conference call, analysts may be left wondering
what to do with their annual estimates. By announcing that annual guidance
will be addressed on the upcoming call, management has just bought time
with the analysts and will likely be given the grace period before the analysts
move numbers.
Less so these days, but certainly in the late 1990s, most stocks had a
whisper number circulating. This number is exactly what it sounds like: the
estimate that the market believes as information buzzes around Wall Street.
It’s always higher or lower than First Call published consensus, but for discussion
purposes, let’s say it’s higher.
Pre-announcements help mitigate the whisper number by defining expectations
into a range. This is particularly critical with a growth stock
that’s performing well, because in the absence of an earnings pre-announcement
Wall Street is free to manufacture information leading up to the conference
call. This is the ultimate in losing control of the communications
process and allowing rumors to define expected financial performance. It
not only creates volatility but most likely puts management in position to
fall short of expectations. By pre-announcing a range, the whisper number
is eliminated.
Another reason to pre-announce earnings is if an upcoming shortfall is
caused by industry-related problems. If that’s the case, getting the news out
as soon as possible is even more important, but again, not before management
is comfortable with the revised range. On such industry-related news,
companies in the same industry will tend to move up and down together. Because
a company’s peers are likely also feeling the same effect, it’s best, if
possible, to be the first in a peer group to adjust expectations. That
way, management is on the offensive rather than reacting to a competitor
miss and any Reg FD issue is eliminated. To that point, if management is
the first to pre-announce the industry issue and new earnings estimates,
they are free to discuss it, within reason, with the buy- and sell-side. The
industry peers who don’t pre-announce will likely get a large volume of
calls that they won’t be able to field because commenting would risk a Reg
FD violation.
Ultimately, pre-announcing every quarter, even when there isn’t a material
variance from expectations, is a good policy because it doubles the
amount of communications with Wall Street from four (earnings releases) to eight (earnings releases and pre-announcements). By increasing the communication,
consistency and transparency are increased, and management’s
credibility can follow. The eight communication points also free management
of potential Reg FD violations, as referring back or forward to the latest
communication is very easy. In other words, the more communication,
the fewer windows to talk about material, nonpublic information.
Exceeding the Number, and Increasing the Reward
Many CEOs have realized the hard way that being better than expected
does not always turn out to be better than expected. In most cases, when a
company materially beats earnings estimates and waits to announce it until
the release date—for example, the First Call consensus is $0.10, and the
company reports $0.20 on earnings day—they will see their stock increase
that day.
However, Wall Street veterans look at that behavior and wonder if the
same policy goes when management misses numbers. The smart portfolio
managers ask themselves if the company can also surprise on the downside
by that much, and come to the conclusion that the company cannot forecast
its business. This can be disconcerting to the analyst or portfolio manager relying
on management for consistency and guidance. The pattern, more than
the content in this case, becomes discounted into valuation.
When an analyst recommends a stock, he or she wants to address their
sales force as many times as possible, particularly when the stock is behaving
in line with the rating. The morning meeting section taught that conservative
guidance, and meeting or exceeding guidance, can start a powerful
cycle of addressing the sales force and penetrating institutional accounts.
Octagon Inc. was in the last third of its quarter. The First Call consensus
estimate was $0.20, and the company’s own forecast, as disseminated
on the last conference call, was $0.17 to $0.20. If management
believed there was absolutely no way that earnings would be lower
than $0.22 and they’d probably be $0.25, an appropriate move would
be to pre-announce earnings and increase the range to $0.20 to $0.22.
That way, when reporting the actual quarter three to four weeks
later, management would have already known that it would report
$0.22 at minimum and most likely $0.25. If $0.25 it would be an upside
surprise, and if management reported $0.22, it would still be
within the increased range.
Therefore, if IR and management are conservative, and use pre-announcements
to raise guidance and update the market each quarter, the analyst has
that many more times to address the sales force and reiterate conviction
about the stock. Each case becomes an opportunity to generate commissions,
create a payday for the firm and analyst, build credibility for management,
bolster valuation, and reduce the company’s cost of capital.
Pre-announcing elevated to an art form can be about breaking one piece
of good news into two: giving the analyst two good data points to talk to
clients about and two pluses for addressing the sales force.
Without conservative guidance, however, management doesn’t have the
leverage to do this. Rather, they only introduce risk into the stock and increase
the company’s chance of missing estimates. Pre-announcing regularly,
particularly when times are good, reinforces the company’s upward trend,
labels management as conservative, and builds credibility.
Safety First—The Pre-Announce for Prevention
Sarbanes-Oxley and Reg FD reduce volatility in our view, because all analysts
and investors receive the information simultaneously. Unlike the Wild
West atmosphere of the 1990s, when analysts regularly extracted material
information in closed-door meetings with management teams, strict enforcement
limits incremental information.
Therefore, why wouldn’t companies pre-announce every quarter, if for
nothing else to reduce the chances of a material slip up in a one-on-one call?
With four set pre-announcements, the public information is always fresh
and management can breathe easy in casual conversations.
Another safeguard is Stock Watch, an organization that keeps an eye on
trading. If there is heavy trading volume, Stock Watch is going to call the
company and ask if they have any news. If the company says no, then they
better not come out with new information in the near future. And if the
company has a practice of pre-announcing whenever it thinks it’s going to
miss or exceed the estimate, or just in the normal course of business, then
The Street believes management and stays with guidance.
Road shows, which are discussed in the next section of the book, should
always be scheduled after the earnings calls so that the information is disseminated
before management begins the process. But in cases when that’s
not feasible, companies may want to consider pre-announcing quarterly results
or material news before the scheduled events so that management can
speak freely. If a pre-announcement is not feasible before presenting publicly,
management should be counseled to refer back to material in the last public
conference call. Legally, the company can’t break any new ground.
How to Pre-Announce
For all pre-announcements where there is a material miss—that is, actual
earnings are off by more than 20 to 30 percent—a conference call is in order
to quickly explain the problems and potential solutions. Although the last
thing management wants to do is talk about it, that’s exactly what it must do.
The conference call gives analysts and investors a chance to ask questions
and, for the misses, vent their frustration. The conference call also benefits
the analysts who have the luxury of hearing the details in an open
forum with the buy-side. Less pressure is then on the analyst because everyone
has heard the information in this forum. The analyst need not figure it
out from a short press release and a 10-minute follow-up.
When a company supports a pre-announcement with a conference call,
the odds are that the stock will decline less than it otherwise would have.
The signal also goes out that management is visible in bad times as well as
good, which is critical.
A Feel for When
Because of The Street’s estimate hypersensitivity, pre-announcements can be
a tricky business.
In the middle of its second quarter, a company in the apparel industry
was on target to hit its estimates, but felt that it would miss the third quarter
and had uncertainty about the full year. Management was reluctant to
change anything. IR urged them to bring down the fourth quarter, even
though they weren’t sure. Management took our advice and the stock
dropped that day.
However, it gave management a slight cushion to focus on the business
and not the stock price, because the new full-year guidance was conservative.
If the company had maintained the original fourth quarter estimate
they would have been in a nail-biting situation for six months, wondering if
estimates were too high. They would also have been in a Reg FD pickle
when asked about their comfort level with annual estimates.
Getting It Right
The approach to pre-announcing must be consistent because the behavior of
management oftentimes, more so than the actual event, will be factored into
long-term valuation.
If a company only pre-announces when there is a material variance from
the consensus estimate, then Wall Street knows that if there’s no pre-release
during any particular quarter, then the company is tracking toward the number. On the other hand, if there’s never a pre-release and the company falls
into a potential “make a quarter, miss a quarter” pattern, Wall Street will be
tentative to get involved and the multiple might suffer. Therefore, to mitigate
volatility and the guessing games on Wall Street, and prevent management
from violating disclosure laws, a consistent pattern of pre-announcing and
refining conservative guidance is recommended. Management can also use
other, non-earnings-oriented releases—for example, an announcement of a
new marketing initiative—to update the market on numbers.
Putting It All Together
The following case study of a real company with a fictional name engaging
in the delivery stage of IR illustrates how consistent and conservative earnings
guidance, combined with pre-announcements and the right message,
completely engaged Wall Street via research and the morning meeting, created
commission business, made management look great, and drove the
multiple to premium status.
Rebuilding Credibility
Orange Foods was a large restaurant chain that had a history of inconsistent
performance relative to earnings expectations. They’d hit their
number and then lowered guidance regularly. Analysts were generally
negative on the company because of this inconsistency, and management
was universally perceived as not managing The Street properly.
Orange Foods began working with our IR team on October 1,
2001. The assessment of the problem was that the CEO was very
wrapped up in communicating a growth story on par with the best of
the industry, rather than acknowledging the limitations of his own concept.
In reality, this company just wasn’t capable of hyper-growth despite
its underlying quality, reputations, and brand.
This unrealistic communication led IR to plot a more conservative
strategy. On October 24, management took the advice and formally
brought earnings guidance down again. Only this time, it was not a
small adjustment. IR suggested lowering guidance by at least 20 percent.
The IR advisors told management that the stock would likely drop
materially and, in fact, that happened. It sparked the following comments
from four analysts:
(continued)
Analyst A: “Orange Foods reported Q3 earnings that were $0.01
below our estimate and more importantly revised Q4’01 and FY 2002
downward. Orange Foods cited choppy sales and margin pressure. We
are revising our estimates downward although our 2002 estimate is at
the top of the company’s revised range. We reiterate Buy rating.”
Analyst B: “We are lowering estimates and our rating to Market
Perform from Buy. Orange Foods trades at 24.9x our 2002 EPS estimate
and a discount to the group multiple of 30.7x”
Analyst C: “Despite drastic and likely conservative stance by management,
we are maintaining our BUY rating (although lowering estimates)
given that the new guidance will likely become immediately embedded
in the stock—moving it to relatively attractive valuation levels.”
And then there was this:
Analyst D: “We are reducing our rating from Strong Buy to Buy. Although
the guidance reduction is more aggressive than we believe is necessary,
we prefer to have a base to work with and be in position to only
make positive changes to our EPS estimates as our analysis dictates.”
Analyst D offered IR’s desired result. Despite an initial 15 percent
dip in the stock price, management was now viewed by the sell-side as
conservative rather than aggressive, and all of the analysts revised their
estimates to the exact range set by management.
Though two of the analysts lowered their rating, there seemed to be
an awareness that the estimates were conservative. The helpful observation,
especially to institutional investors, was that Orange Foods was
trading at a discount to its peers.
Most rewarding, between the lines of what they wrote, both analysts
C and D were telling investors to take a second look at the stock
despite the ratings downgrade in Analyst D’s case. These situations
make a company interesting to Wall Street.
A month later, in November 2001, several analysts wanted management
out on the road to visit investors. Why? Because the stock’s
risk profile had been greatly reduced, thanks to conservative guidance.
The sell-side knew it and felt comfortable that management was positioned
to meet or exceed estimates for the next few quarters. Because
analysts’ credibility is linked to the companies they bring to investors on
non-deal road shows, they always look for companies with conservative
estimates—that is, stocks that are Buys.
This stock was now a Buy largely because of management’s own actions. The new conservative guidance was responsible for the analysts
having a higher level of conviction in their writing and when talking
to their sales force or to investors.
Analyst C, who took management to buyers in early November,
said, “We hosted Orange Foods management in San Francisco and
Denver earlier this week. Despite recently lowered FY 2002 outlook
and some near-term loss of top-line momentum, we still believe that the
underlying business model is robust, providing ample, high return
growth for several more years. Our $0.80 FY 2002 EPS estimate is
predicated on 1% comps and should prove conservative.”
Conservative guidance also brought new analysts to the table because
they knew their chances of being wrong on their recommendation
were very low. Accordingly, another analyst, Analyst E, launched
coverage in November and said, “We are enthusiastic about the longerterm
prospects for the stock, but believe an increase in consensus EPS
estimates will be necessary to move the stock out of its current period
of malaise.” We knew this was more likely than not given the guidance,
meaning management and the analyst would look great as the year
wore on.
In the meantime, IR felt that management was clearly delivering on
expectations. All of the research reports were extremely positive in
their outlook, despite the ratings, and that was what mattered most.
The buy-side worries less about the actual rating then the text.
After all, what’s the difference between Strong Buy, Buy, Accumulate,
or Outperform? These are, as mentioned earlier, investment banking
ratings designed not to offend management teams so that investment
bankers can pitch their wares. The buy-side knows this, and for that
reason they look more at the text and the estimates than the rating. The
moral of the story for the CEO is not to worry about any rating shortterm;
worry about what’s written.
To that point, on December 11, 2001, Analyst D reiterated her Buy
Rating after taking the company out on the road. The analyst wrote:
“Company has news to talk about. We are raising our target price to
$25 and reiterating our BUY Rating.” The analyst also said, “We believe
that our current EPS forecasts for both Q4’01 and FY 2002 are
likely to prove conservative. We are therefore raising our target P/E
multiple to 30x to reflect the company’s return to 30% EPS growth.”
(continued)
This was the first time an analyst had increased the target multiple
for the stock to 30x. Before this, Orange Foods had, despite higher
earnings estimates, been trading at a discount to the group. Here the analyst
argued for 5 extra multiple points on the stock, and with the 20
million shares outstanding, this was an argument that the company was
worth an incremental $100 million.
On January 10, 2002, Analyst D reiterated her Buy Rating again
when Orange Foods announced preliminary Q4 results, confirmed
comfort with the current Q4 EPS estimate range, and established a
range for Q1. In the release IR stated that: “. . . based on these preliminary
results, management is comfortable with fourth quarter
2001 earnings per share guidance at the high end of the previously
announced $0.14 to $0.16 range.” IR also announced that Orange
Foods had “established guidance for the first quarter ended March 31,
2002. Based on current visibility, management expects a first quarter
2002 earnings range of approximately $0.17 to $0.19 per share based
on . . .” Also, “. . . its comfort with previously announced 2002 EPS
guidance of $0.80 to $0.84 per share.”
This announcement allowed IR to share another positive data
point with The Street: that management was comfortable with the previously
announced range. The management sell-side relationship was
blossoming. Analysts who took the company on the road and recommended
a Buy looked great, and investors were happy with management’s
certainty.
Things were even better in reality. Management had set themselves
up to release several positive data points down the road. For one, they
were fairly confident that they would at least hit the very high end of
the fourth quarter range, although it looked as though they might beat
it by a penny. Two, the earnings guidance range set for Q1’02 was very
conservative with virtually no risk. Three, 2002 estimates were conservative
and beatable, if business stayed the same.
Even though the First Call estimates were going up, they were going
up in line with management’s guidance and comfort level. Management
was in full control in this case, never having to worry about the estimate,
meaning fewer phone calls from concerned analysts and buysiders
and more time to run the business, which was invaluable.
“Conservative” in this case meant realistically looking at the business
and factors in management’s control and taking a discount to that
estimate for factors outside of management’s control—factors that inpevitably have an effect every year. These consensus estimates gave Orange
Foods a safety net to deal with unforeseen circumstances.
On January 29, 2002, the company announced Q4’01 EPS a penny
better than the range with which they were comfortable on January 10.
They reiterated conservative guidance for the March quarter, all of fiscal
2002, and fiscal 2003 despite pressure from the sell-side to raise
guidance.
Analyst E maintained the market perform but on valuation only,
cited 30.2x the 2002 estimate, and wrote, “Because Orange Foods is accelerating
its unit growth, margins may be under pressure, creating
slightly above average risk regarding negative EPS surprises.”
Analyst C maintained the Buy. “Estimates for 2002 look conservative.
We believe our ’02 estimate of $0.82 is conservative by at least
5%. Therefore, we continue to believe that EPS estimates will continue
to be upwardly revised.” But he did not raise his estimate, which was
key. He followed management’s guidance, so he and his firm were positioned
to look good. He had a Buy, and he would look great if the company
increased earnings.
Analyst A maintained the Buy Rating, arguing for 30x 2003 $1.01
estimate.
And then another nation was heard from. From a research firm
with no investment banking that, in an effort to gain credibility, only
carried Buy or Sell recommendations, Analyst F recommended a Sell.
He wrote, and this is a Sell recommendation mind you, “We believe
there is minimal earnings risk to the story but the valuation is high.
Shares have rocketed back to 30x consensus. We continue to be a believer
in the long term prospects of the company but would wait for a
more attractive entry point.” Victory for IR and management.
For the first time in awhile, Orange Foods felt it had nothing to
worry about with The Street. They’d kept expectations low, left behind
their traditional “make a quarter, miss a quarter” pattern, and kept several
“arrows in the quiver,” meaning there was a good chance guidance
would increase in the future. Instead of blindly communicating aggressive
guidance at the beginning of the year, management would start off
lower, and as the year went on and results came in, only then would
they raise guidance, and only when they were sure.
This approach would reduce risk materially and attract investor
(continued)
interest. The company might arrive at the same actual earnings at
the end of the year, but the way they got there built credibility and
valuation.
Analyst E wasn’t buying it, however, and felt the chances were
slightly higher than normal for an earnings miss. Behind the scenes, IR
knew this analyst was at risk as Orange Foods would continue to revise
upward throughout the year. Additionally, Analyst F had written what
we read to be a very positive Sell report. The analyst downgraded based
only on valuation and argued to buy on the dips. On the other end of
the spectrum, Analysts A and C had written about how conservative
management was and how consensus would go up over time. This was
very powerful and a direct result of the strategy.
The next month, February 4, a recommendation from Analyst G
caught IR’s eye. This analyst had been following the industry for a long
time and would not recommend a stock if he thought management
credibility or earnings were shaky. Management’s constant reiteration
of conservative quarterly and yearly guidance was the difference. He
raised the stock to a Buy, saying, “We have seen steady improvement in
stores and believe that the company is setting itself up to steadily outperform
on an earnings basis. . . . The bar has been lowered sufficiently
to provide an easy platform for management to exceed.”
In March, another analyst came on board, initiated coverage and
recommended a Buy. Analyst H said, “The balance sheet is sound and
financing is in place, allowing management the ability to execute their
growth plan without raising additional equity.”
This phrase came verbatim from the conference call script. By providing
the analysts with specific, reliable, and quotable information, IR
made it easier for the analysts to write what the company wanted them
to write, and management took control of its Wall Street destiny.
Another analyst covering the stock, Analyst I, wrote a 30-page report
on the company with an Outperform Rating. “Orange Foods is
currently trading at 24.1x our 2002 estimates (stock traded down 20%
recently), a premium valuation, yet one that reflects investor confidence.
. . .” This quote was great and showed a 360-degree turn on
Wall Street. Whereas prior to our engagement with the company, analysts
argued that Orange Foods should trade at a discount to the group,
they were now arguing for a premium valuation to the group. This
stance implied a lower cost of capital, which was key.
Obviously, at this point, the strategy was really taking hold. All of the analysts were speaking very highly of the company regardless of
their ratings. They knew management’s conservative stance on guidance
would ultimately make them look good. Additionally, the quote
from Analyst I showed IR that management was being rewarded with a
higher multiple because they understood how to manage The Street.
In early April, Orange Foods announced that it was comfortable
with the high end of the previously announced range of $0.17 to $0.19
per share for the first quarter ended March 31, 2002. On April 23,
2002, Orange Foods beat that range and announced $0.20 as the quarterly
result. Management knew in early April that $0.20 per share was
very likely, but not guaranteed, and reiterated comfort with the $0.17
to $0.19 per share range to maximize the announcement and generate
two positive data points versus one. One of those announcements, possibly
generating the $0.20 per share, would be perceived as an upside
surprise relative to expectations, although if they earned $0.19 it would
have been viewed positively as well. If $0.20 was the result, analysts
would have a boost and Orange would have created two opportunities
for analysts to share good news with their sales force.
In fact, $0.20 was the ultimate result after the auditors had closed
the books. Analysts raised numbers by $0.01 (the “overage”) and estimates
were revised upward. But management kept a tight leash and
conveyed specific guidance for the upcoming quarter, the full year
2002, and 2003. At this point, the stock hit $26, up from $17 in October,
just six months before.
IR also found that the company now had more buy-and-hold investors
than traders who fed off volatility. The new investor base loved
the slow and steady philosophy. Moreover, the First Call numbers were
still at the range set by management, keeping the stock interesting to
everyone on Wall Street.
In May, two new sell-side firms came in with coverage. Both rated
Orange Foods a Long-Term Buy. More analysts were attracted to Orange
Foods because they knew management was being conservative. If
these analysts thought First Call was too high, they would have thought
twice about risking their reputations and publishing on the stock. If
they did, it would likely have been a lower rating, and the conviction
level most likely would have been suspect. In June another firm initiated
coverage with a Buy recommendation.
(continued)
After initiating strategic IR efforts, Orange Foods’ management team
took control of Wall Street and repositioned its stock conservatively relative
to expectations. As the stocks outperformed, the analysts looked smart, the
buy-side was happy, and management was perceived by investors as savvy,
thereby raising its credibility. The company stayed the course and consistently
matched or overdelivered on what they promised. Finally, this had
vast, positive effects on media coverage and employee morale.
DEFINITION AND DELIVERY
There are many nuances to strategic IR that come together in the delivery
stage. The content, method, and timing of disclosures is a culmination of uncovering
value, building or redefining the investment thesis, and targeting
the landscape in a conservative manner. IR starts with honing in on the definition
and moves on to polish a delivery that is effective, as well as timeand
cost-efficient for management.
On July 2, Orange Foods raised its guidance for the second quarter
from $0.19 to $0.21 to $0.21 to $0.23 per share versus First Call,
which was $0.21. The company also increased full-year 2002 guidance
to $0.85 to $0.88 per share and 2003 guidance to $1.01 to $1.05 per
share. On July 3, Bloomberg’s Starmine service published a report
targeting Orange Foods as one of several companies with the propensity
to surprise on the upside. On July 19, another analyst rated Orange
Foods a new Buy.
On July 23, 2002, Orange Foods posted earnings of $0.23 per
share, achieving the high end of the range. Again they reiterated conservative
2002 and 2003 guidance and encouraged analysts not to
move numbers. Analysts followed suit.
By the end of the year, of the 10 analysts who published Orange
Foods research, 70 percent maintained some form of Buy rating versus
30 percent prior to this strategic IR initiative. All continued to be
within the desired First Call range, and the analysts benefited greatly as
Orange Foods rounded out the year beating numbers for three consecutive
quarters.
Commissions were generated for the sell-side, returns were generated
for the buy-side, and credibility (and plenty of it) was generated
for the CEO & CFO. Based on this performance, these executives
would be candidates to eventually move on to bigger public companies
and really build their careers and personal wealth.