CHAPTER 23 Meeting The Street
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Whereas the Delivery stage of IR dealt with basic disclosures like earnings
releases and conference calls, the Dialogue stage includes in-person
events geared toward interaction with the sell-side and the buy-side.
Through these events, most savvy management teams are able to maintain a
sound relationship with The Street and offer systematic information that
benefits existing analysts and portfolio managers as well as those who are
new to the story.
THE NON-DEAL ROAD SHOW
At the top of the list of these events is the non-deal road show. This is a series
of one-on-one meetings with the buy-side over a one-day period or over
multiple days in several cities. As the “non-deal” aspect of the name implies,
management is not raising money at the time (unlike an IPO or secondary
offering). It’s simply a forum to update money managers on the company’s
progress.
The non-deal road show is the most effective forum to develop interest
in a stock because the portfolio manager can ask questions, look management
in the eye, and share concerns in a private setting. This is very different
from a well-attended conference call where a portfolio manager might not
even be able to ask a question, let alone five or six like she wants. The oneon-
one meeting usually lasts 45 minutes to an hour, and there can be anywhere
from five to eight meetings in a given day.
Management and its IR department should plan the year in advance and
specify which dates work best for the non-deal road show. Four times per
year, directly after each quarterly conference call, is a good start, although
management may want to layer in one or two other opportunities. The reason
post–conference call road shows are best is basically for Reg FD purposes.
Because all new company information and financials will have been
released and discussed on the call, management will be free to talk about the
latest developments and do so without disclosure risk.
However, circumstances may cause management to hit the road intraquarter.
A small acquisition may have to be explained or the stock may have
fallen without any change to the underlying financials. Under either of these
scenarios, management can elect to meet with the buy-side. However, if any
chance exists that a material initiative will be discussed, a press release announcing
that initiative should be distributed prior to the meetings.
With dates in hand and topics fresh, IR must then decide which buy-side
accounts to target. This task can be daunting for IR, but a capital markets
perspective makes it easy.
Analysts increase their compensation levels in a variety of ways. They
can be good stock pickers, publish volumes of research, or call 300 portfolio
managers every month with their latest idea. One of the biggest determinants
of compensation, however, is the non-deal road show: delivering management
teams to the buy-side on a regular basis. This helps the buy-side
cost-effectively meet management teams and of course helps the company
tell its story. It also helps the sell-side, because after the meeting, if the portfolio
manager likes the company and management, and buys the stock, he or
she will usually buy it through the sponsoring investment bank.
This outcome is much more likely for smaller, over-the-counter stocks,
where only a handful of sell-side investment banks make a market. In that
scenario, if Fidelity were to buy the stock they’d have to go through one of
the handful of firms anyway. However, with NYSE-listed companies, the
buy-side will find a way to pay back the sponsoring firm in all likelihood.
For example, if Fidelity ends up buying stock in a company that Wachovia
Securities brought through town on the non-deal roadshow, but didn’t execute
the trade with Wachovia for whatever reason, odds are that another
large trade will come Wachovia’s way. More than ever, with investment
banking fees eliminated from analyst compensation, these commissions are
invaluable.
Therefore, in the case of a non-deal road show, a company should never
target the buy-side directly (unless there is no current analyst coverage) and
certainly never use a third-party, outside IR agency looking to take ownership
of the process. Unfortunately, this scenario happens all the time, and results
from a lack of capital markets expertise on management’s part and a
total lack of expertise on the part of the outside IR agency. Whenever possible
the company should enlist the sell-side to shepherd the process and create
an economic event. That economic event, in this case, is commissions
that will invariably be steered to the sponsoring bank. Multiplied by 300
non-deal road shows annually, the economics become fairly powerful.
Once the company has determined which analyst or analysts will put the
one-on-ones together, IR must ensure that the meeting schedule is optimized,
which means double-checking the quality of the appointments that the sellside
has made and adding any others that may seem appropriate. Because of
the lack of a relationship, the sell-side can sometimes leave critical meetings
off the agenda. Through its own search, IR must have the appropriate investors
in each city at hand, and insert one or two as the schedule permits.
Once those meetings are set, however, IR should make sure that the sponsoring
bank gets credit because it will likely lead to a solid relationship and
commission business down the road.
IR that has this perspective, always looking to create paydays for the
sell-side, is much more inclined to garner coverage and have a better, more
interactive relationship with the analyst. This latter point can mean the difference
in an upgrade or a downgrade or simply receiving the benefit of the
doubt in a situation where an analyst might otherwise reduce the rating.
If the road show is in multiple cities, IR must quarterback the process.
We would suggest giving the larger investment banks New York and Boston
(one city for each analyst), and if the company intends to visit Philadelphia,
Baltimore, Chicago, Denver, or the West Coast, split those dates with the remaining
sell-siders. This approach allows the company to keep an auction
atmosphere with multiple sell-side firms vying for time. It also serves to create
an economic event for every analyst involved. If, for example, management
visited every city with its two largest investment banks, the smaller analysts
wouldn’t have much incentive to recommend the stock and might
become disengaged. Make no mistake that investment banks exist to make
money, and for many smaller firms with no notable investment banking
business, the non-deal road show is a primary source of their top-lines.
Therefore, when orchestrating the road show process, IR should maximize
the event, which tends to maximize value over the long run.
One more point on choosing investment banks for road shows. Through
a summary of the trading reports of the investment banks, IR departments
can see on a week-to-week basis which investment banks are trading the
highest volumes in their stock. Year-to-date results might show SG Cowen to
have traded the most and Piper Jaffray close behind. However, Lehman
Brothers also covers the stock, is constantly tenth or below in trading volume,
yet is always asking to escort the company to premier cities like New
York or Boston. Our view is that an investment bank must earn that right,
and trading volume can be a great indicator of the investment bank’s willingness
to support a stock. In this hypothetical example, IR could split New
York and Boston with Cowen and Piper, and give Lehman Brothers a secondary
city until it shows improving numbers.
TEACH-INS
Another important event that all companies should adopt is the teach-in. Before
explaining the actual teach-in, however, a review of how analysts
launch coverage on stocks would be helpful.
After discussing the investment idea with the director of research and
after writing his or her report, a time is usually scheduled with the institutional
sales force to present the idea, almost always after market hours.
The analyst steps to the podium and makes his or her argument on why
the company and the stock are interesting, and a question-and-answer session
ensues.
As stated in earlier chapters, a lot rides on each stock pick. Certainly the
analyst’s reputation with the buy-side and the analyst’s reputation with his
or her own sales force is at stake. Also, those stakes move up a notch if the
analyst’s last pick went awry, with investors losing money and the sales force
losing points with buy-side accounts.
For that reason, management should actually be part of the teach-in
when a new analyst launches coverage. This is not only a show of support
for the analyst by management (impressing his or her bosses), but it can
temper any existing ill will with the sales force, particularly if the analyst’s
last pick was a poor one.
In this scenario, the analyst would conduct the teach-in like any other
stock pick, but management could conduct its own brief presentation after
the fact, or simply be available for the question-and-answer session.
This IR technique can markedly help the analyst in terms of credibility
and compensation and invigorate the sales force to call accounts and recommend
the stock. It gives the sales force increased motivation if they are able
to make a call and say “we met with management today,” which is not very
common.
A teach-in takes the risk out of a launch and maximizes the event for
everyone involved. In addition, because management will be in town after
the teach-in anyway, IR should schedule, along with the launching analyst,
a series of one-on-one meetings in that city to further maximize the time and
money spent traveling.
CONFERENCES
Throughout the year, numerous investment banks hold large investor conferences.
Often centered around industry themes, they attract many important buy-side players. Management teams should, selectively, make themselves
available for these sell-side gatherings to present or even fill slots in an
industry panel or topical discussion.
This effort creates awareness and helps investors better understand the
company. Management’s presence also supports the analyst and the investment
bank by indirectly generating a payday. After all, analysts are paid on
commissions, and a great conference line-up leads to high buy-side attendance
and increased commissions.
Therefore, IR should track which conferences are well attended and by
whom and which are not. To that point, if there are six people in the room,
it may not be worth the CEO’s time, unless those six people are from Fidelity,
Capital Research, T. Rowe Price, Dreyfus, Trust Company of The
West, and State Street Asset Management. Similarly, there could be 50 “investors”
in the room, but they are individual brokers offered a free lunch to
fill the seats. IR’s responsibility is to screen and prioritize management’s
time, and conference planning must be highly selective.
One last point: to maximize management’s time at the event, IR can use
the sponsoring investment bank to set up one-on-ones, and then utilize another
investment bank to set up the following day should management elect
to stay. This could be in-filled with media opportunities so that the time and
money spent to attend the conference are maximized with events that the
CEO would have to travel again to do.
INVESTOR DAYS
Investor days that feature tours of the company’s operating facilities and a
schedule of meetings with senior management members can be highly
successful methods of building bonds with the investment community.
Not only do these days get the investor or analyst into the business environment,
but they allow management to describe the business with visual
references.
For example, a CEO can take a group of analysts and portfolio managers
through his headquarters to explain a new initiative. Upon seeing the
plan and the workers executing the plan, they are much more likely to have
a better recollection of the concept, versus seeing it explained on a presentation
slide. After the tour, the head of design might speak about plans, trends,
and the competitive market. Then, off to marketing and distribution, where
the products are physically packed and stored.
These visits also provide the investment community with the opportunity to meet company personnel beyond the CEO and CFO, which is especially
helpful for a company that may not have the most dynamic executive
at the helm, but has an exciting and enthusiastic team of professionals and
employees and a depth of management that puts the company in a positive
light.
All of these images are highly valuable for the sell- and buy-sides and
tend to stay in their minds. For this reason alone, companies should plan one
or two investor days per year and open the day to new and existing investors.
Finally, the event should be Web cast to ensure that material information
isn’t being selectively disclosed.
TRADE SHOWS
Trade shows are a good arena for management to meet various stakeholders
and capital markets players and usually offer a more relaxed environment
than an industry conference. To make the most of the event and all the attendees,
IR should engineer a cocktail hour or dinner, sponsored by one of
the sell-side analysts in attendance to foster better relationships. The company
gets the visibility, the buy-side attends another meeting where he or she
can access management, the analyst gets credit for the event and positions
his or her firm for a commission payday, and IR slips away, knowing the job
was well done.
CANCELING AN APPEARANCE
Management should never cancel a scheduled appearance. Management
teams sometimes become aware, just before a road show or panel, of a problem
that will hit their earnings. The instinct is to not attend, thinking no
news was better news. But if a company cancels a scheduled appearance,
The Street assumes something is wrong. As a result, even if in actuality
everything is fine, the stock is likely to take a hit.
This scenario happened with a company in the branded consumer products
sector prior to its scheduled appearance at a conference. IR strongly advised
them to pre-announce the earnings miss on the morning of the conference
and still show up for their presentation, which they did. Their stock
took a small hit, but after they stood up and faced a room full of analysts
and portfolio managers to discuss the issues, the dust quickly settled. Management
also earned significant credibility points.
THE PRESENTATION
IR must always have up-to-date presentation slides with which to attend
these types of meetings. Unfortunately, after numerous uses and revisions,
these presentations can often evolve into something that’s long and unmanageable,
ending the interaction process with Wall Street before it begins. For
this reason, IR needs to keep the presentation fresh and current and practice
delivering it in no more than 25 minutes. This time limit holds for one-onones,
but these days, some sell-side conferences allow only 15 minutes and
in some cases, 10. It goes without saying then that the Wall Street time
crunch is behind this compression, and most analysts and portfolio managers
believe that if management can’t present its business in 15 minutes,
then there is a communications problem.
Contrary to this thinking, management teams sometimes show up with
a 55-page slide presentation that lists each company’s product, backed up by
pages of the technology and management bios. This sure sign of an inexperienced
management team will more likely than not result in the analyst or
portfolio manager tuning out, politely showing management the door, and
not buying the stock. Unfortunately, snap judgments are made every day on
Wall Street, and IR’s job is to know in advance how the sell- and the
buy-sides are used to seeing management presentations. In other words, IR
must package the product for Wall Street, or the result will often be reflected
in valuation.
In addition, presentation skills are important because The Street naturally
judges one management team relative to the next. Management should
be enthusiastic and dynamic, yet avoid being promotional. In addition, companies
should always refrain from addressing valuation. In other words,
hearing management make an argument that its stock is undervalued is a
turnoff. This is the domain of the professionals in the audience, and conclusions
on valuation should be left to them. Management’s job is to generate
financial performance and deliver results in the most consistent and transparent
manner possible.
Below is a suggested outline for the presentation slides and is by no
means the only way to construct them. However, it might be a successful
guide in tailoring a presentation for a specific company. A solid presentation
should include:
Market data: stock symbol, exchange, current price, and shares outstanding,
which leads the viewer to market capitalization.
Company overview: the description of the business, management and
experience, market position or niche, and historic EPS growth.
Strategic initiatives: the plan for earnings growth.
Company financials: a snapshot of the numbers with quarterly, year-todate,
and historical (last three years) information. It also includes
gross margins and operating margins (sometimes by segment), and
current status of the balance sheet. For companies that use significant
debt to expand their business, this might be interest coverage,
while debt-free businesses, like retailers, might profile the current
ratio (current assets divided by current liabilities).
Key investment highlights: The five or six points on why the company is
a good investment.
MEETING MANAGEMENT IN BAD TIMES TOO
No matter the forum, nothing builds management credibility more than
showing up and facing the music when things are bad. When an event occurs
that pushes the stock down, management should consider going on the road
with an analyst to visit institutions or attending a conference.
This might seem counterintuitive, but the action itself can add to longterm
valuation. A portfolio manager who knows that management will be
available during bad times knows he’ll be able to have access and get the information
needed to make a decision. Management teams that hide when
times are bad may never get a second chance with an experienced investor.
Also, in many of these meetings, the audience will be welcoming, because
they’ll likely see the drop in the stock as an opportunity and potentially soak
up some of the share supply as its being dumped on the market. Therefore,
as unpleasant as it may seem, organizing a road show when the company
may be at its worst can make management look its best.
THE STREET AND THE COMPANY
Meeting The Street is about building and maintaining the dialogue, in good
times and bad. A solid relationship between management and the investment
community can only help a company when the inevitable, unpredictable
event occurs.
Whereas the Delivery stage of IR dealt with basic disclosures like earnings
releases and conference calls, the Dialogue stage includes in-person
events geared toward interaction with the sell-side and the buy-side.
Through these events, most savvy management teams are able to maintain a
sound relationship with The Street and offer systematic information that
benefits existing analysts and portfolio managers as well as those who are
new to the story.
THE NON-DEAL ROAD SHOW
At the top of the list of these events is the non-deal road show. This is a series
of one-on-one meetings with the buy-side over a one-day period or over
multiple days in several cities. As the “non-deal” aspect of the name implies,
management is not raising money at the time (unlike an IPO or secondary
offering). It’s simply a forum to update money managers on the company’s
progress.
The non-deal road show is the most effective forum to develop interest
in a stock because the portfolio manager can ask questions, look management
in the eye, and share concerns in a private setting. This is very different
from a well-attended conference call where a portfolio manager might not
even be able to ask a question, let alone five or six like she wants. The oneon-
one meeting usually lasts 45 minutes to an hour, and there can be anywhere
from five to eight meetings in a given day.
Management and its IR department should plan the year in advance and
specify which dates work best for the non-deal road show. Four times per
year, directly after each quarterly conference call, is a good start, although
management may want to layer in one or two other opportunities. The reason
post–conference call road shows are best is basically for Reg FD purposes.
Because all new company information and financials will have been
released and discussed on the call, management will be free to talk about the
latest developments and do so without disclosure risk.
However, circumstances may cause management to hit the road intraquarter.
A small acquisition may have to be explained or the stock may have
fallen without any change to the underlying financials. Under either of these
scenarios, management can elect to meet with the buy-side. However, if any
chance exists that a material initiative will be discussed, a press release announcing
that initiative should be distributed prior to the meetings.
With dates in hand and topics fresh, IR must then decide which buy-side
accounts to target. This task can be daunting for IR, but a capital markets
perspective makes it easy.
Analysts increase their compensation levels in a variety of ways. They
can be good stock pickers, publish volumes of research, or call 300 portfolio
managers every month with their latest idea. One of the biggest determinants
of compensation, however, is the non-deal road show: delivering management
teams to the buy-side on a regular basis. This helps the buy-side
cost-effectively meet management teams and of course helps the company
tell its story. It also helps the sell-side, because after the meeting, if the portfolio
manager likes the company and management, and buys the stock, he or
she will usually buy it through the sponsoring investment bank.
This outcome is much more likely for smaller, over-the-counter stocks,
where only a handful of sell-side investment banks make a market. In that
scenario, if Fidelity were to buy the stock they’d have to go through one of
the handful of firms anyway. However, with NYSE-listed companies, the
buy-side will find a way to pay back the sponsoring firm in all likelihood.
For example, if Fidelity ends up buying stock in a company that Wachovia
Securities brought through town on the non-deal roadshow, but didn’t execute
the trade with Wachovia for whatever reason, odds are that another
large trade will come Wachovia’s way. More than ever, with investment
banking fees eliminated from analyst compensation, these commissions are
invaluable.
Therefore, in the case of a non-deal road show, a company should never
target the buy-side directly (unless there is no current analyst coverage) and
certainly never use a third-party, outside IR agency looking to take ownership
of the process. Unfortunately, this scenario happens all the time, and results
from a lack of capital markets expertise on management’s part and a
total lack of expertise on the part of the outside IR agency. Whenever possible
the company should enlist the sell-side to shepherd the process and create
an economic event. That economic event, in this case, is commissions
that will invariably be steered to the sponsoring bank. Multiplied by 300
non-deal road shows annually, the economics become fairly powerful.
Once the company has determined which analyst or analysts will put the
one-on-ones together, IR must ensure that the meeting schedule is optimized,
which means double-checking the quality of the appointments that the sellside
has made and adding any others that may seem appropriate. Because of
the lack of a relationship, the sell-side can sometimes leave critical meetings
off the agenda. Through its own search, IR must have the appropriate investors
in each city at hand, and insert one or two as the schedule permits.
Once those meetings are set, however, IR should make sure that the sponsoring
bank gets credit because it will likely lead to a solid relationship and
commission business down the road.
IR that has this perspective, always looking to create paydays for the
sell-side, is much more inclined to garner coverage and have a better, more
interactive relationship with the analyst. This latter point can mean the difference
in an upgrade or a downgrade or simply receiving the benefit of the
doubt in a situation where an analyst might otherwise reduce the rating.
If the road show is in multiple cities, IR must quarterback the process.
We would suggest giving the larger investment banks New York and Boston
(one city for each analyst), and if the company intends to visit Philadelphia,
Baltimore, Chicago, Denver, or the West Coast, split those dates with the remaining
sell-siders. This approach allows the company to keep an auction
atmosphere with multiple sell-side firms vying for time. It also serves to create
an economic event for every analyst involved. If, for example, management
visited every city with its two largest investment banks, the smaller analysts
wouldn’t have much incentive to recommend the stock and might
become disengaged. Make no mistake that investment banks exist to make
money, and for many smaller firms with no notable investment banking
business, the non-deal road show is a primary source of their top-lines.
Therefore, when orchestrating the road show process, IR should maximize
the event, which tends to maximize value over the long run.
One more point on choosing investment banks for road shows. Through
a summary of the trading reports of the investment banks, IR departments
can see on a week-to-week basis which investment banks are trading the
highest volumes in their stock. Year-to-date results might show SG Cowen to
have traded the most and Piper Jaffray close behind. However, Lehman
Brothers also covers the stock, is constantly tenth or below in trading volume,
yet is always asking to escort the company to premier cities like New
York or Boston. Our view is that an investment bank must earn that right,
and trading volume can be a great indicator of the investment bank’s willingness
to support a stock. In this hypothetical example, IR could split New
York and Boston with Cowen and Piper, and give Lehman Brothers a secondary
city until it shows improving numbers.
TEACH-INS
Another important event that all companies should adopt is the teach-in. Before
explaining the actual teach-in, however, a review of how analysts
launch coverage on stocks would be helpful.
After discussing the investment idea with the director of research and
after writing his or her report, a time is usually scheduled with the institutional
sales force to present the idea, almost always after market hours.
The analyst steps to the podium and makes his or her argument on why
the company and the stock are interesting, and a question-and-answer session
ensues.
As stated in earlier chapters, a lot rides on each stock pick. Certainly the
analyst’s reputation with the buy-side and the analyst’s reputation with his
or her own sales force is at stake. Also, those stakes move up a notch if the
analyst’s last pick went awry, with investors losing money and the sales force
losing points with buy-side accounts.
For that reason, management should actually be part of the teach-in
when a new analyst launches coverage. This is not only a show of support
for the analyst by management (impressing his or her bosses), but it can
temper any existing ill will with the sales force, particularly if the analyst’s
last pick was a poor one.
In this scenario, the analyst would conduct the teach-in like any other
stock pick, but management could conduct its own brief presentation after
the fact, or simply be available for the question-and-answer session.
This IR technique can markedly help the analyst in terms of credibility
and compensation and invigorate the sales force to call accounts and recommend
the stock. It gives the sales force increased motivation if they are able
to make a call and say “we met with management today,” which is not very
common.
A teach-in takes the risk out of a launch and maximizes the event for
everyone involved. In addition, because management will be in town after
the teach-in anyway, IR should schedule, along with the launching analyst,
a series of one-on-one meetings in that city to further maximize the time and
money spent traveling.
CONFERENCES
Throughout the year, numerous investment banks hold large investor conferences.
Often centered around industry themes, they attract many important buy-side players. Management teams should, selectively, make themselves
available for these sell-side gatherings to present or even fill slots in an
industry panel or topical discussion.
This effort creates awareness and helps investors better understand the
company. Management’s presence also supports the analyst and the investment
bank by indirectly generating a payday. After all, analysts are paid on
commissions, and a great conference line-up leads to high buy-side attendance
and increased commissions.
Therefore, IR should track which conferences are well attended and by
whom and which are not. To that point, if there are six people in the room,
it may not be worth the CEO’s time, unless those six people are from Fidelity,
Capital Research, T. Rowe Price, Dreyfus, Trust Company of The
West, and State Street Asset Management. Similarly, there could be 50 “investors”
in the room, but they are individual brokers offered a free lunch to
fill the seats. IR’s responsibility is to screen and prioritize management’s
time, and conference planning must be highly selective.
One last point: to maximize management’s time at the event, IR can use
the sponsoring investment bank to set up one-on-ones, and then utilize another
investment bank to set up the following day should management elect
to stay. This could be in-filled with media opportunities so that the time and
money spent to attend the conference are maximized with events that the
CEO would have to travel again to do.
INVESTOR DAYS
Investor days that feature tours of the company’s operating facilities and a
schedule of meetings with senior management members can be highly
successful methods of building bonds with the investment community.
Not only do these days get the investor or analyst into the business environment,
but they allow management to describe the business with visual
references.
For example, a CEO can take a group of analysts and portfolio managers
through his headquarters to explain a new initiative. Upon seeing the
plan and the workers executing the plan, they are much more likely to have
a better recollection of the concept, versus seeing it explained on a presentation
slide. After the tour, the head of design might speak about plans, trends,
and the competitive market. Then, off to marketing and distribution, where
the products are physically packed and stored.
These visits also provide the investment community with the opportunity to meet company personnel beyond the CEO and CFO, which is especially
helpful for a company that may not have the most dynamic executive
at the helm, but has an exciting and enthusiastic team of professionals and
employees and a depth of management that puts the company in a positive
light.
All of these images are highly valuable for the sell- and buy-sides and
tend to stay in their minds. For this reason alone, companies should plan one
or two investor days per year and open the day to new and existing investors.
Finally, the event should be Web cast to ensure that material information
isn’t being selectively disclosed.
TRADE SHOWS
Trade shows are a good arena for management to meet various stakeholders
and capital markets players and usually offer a more relaxed environment
than an industry conference. To make the most of the event and all the attendees,
IR should engineer a cocktail hour or dinner, sponsored by one of
the sell-side analysts in attendance to foster better relationships. The company
gets the visibility, the buy-side attends another meeting where he or she
can access management, the analyst gets credit for the event and positions
his or her firm for a commission payday, and IR slips away, knowing the job
was well done.
CANCELING AN APPEARANCE
Management should never cancel a scheduled appearance. Management
teams sometimes become aware, just before a road show or panel, of a problem
that will hit their earnings. The instinct is to not attend, thinking no
news was better news. But if a company cancels a scheduled appearance,
The Street assumes something is wrong. As a result, even if in actuality
everything is fine, the stock is likely to take a hit.
This scenario happened with a company in the branded consumer products
sector prior to its scheduled appearance at a conference. IR strongly advised
them to pre-announce the earnings miss on the morning of the conference
and still show up for their presentation, which they did. Their stock
took a small hit, but after they stood up and faced a room full of analysts
and portfolio managers to discuss the issues, the dust quickly settled. Management
also earned significant credibility points.
THE PRESENTATION
IR must always have up-to-date presentation slides with which to attend
these types of meetings. Unfortunately, after numerous uses and revisions,
these presentations can often evolve into something that’s long and unmanageable,
ending the interaction process with Wall Street before it begins. For
this reason, IR needs to keep the presentation fresh and current and practice
delivering it in no more than 25 minutes. This time limit holds for one-onones,
but these days, some sell-side conferences allow only 15 minutes and
in some cases, 10. It goes without saying then that the Wall Street time
crunch is behind this compression, and most analysts and portfolio managers
believe that if management can’t present its business in 15 minutes,
then there is a communications problem.
Contrary to this thinking, management teams sometimes show up with
a 55-page slide presentation that lists each company’s product, backed up by
pages of the technology and management bios. This sure sign of an inexperienced
management team will more likely than not result in the analyst or
portfolio manager tuning out, politely showing management the door, and
not buying the stock. Unfortunately, snap judgments are made every day on
Wall Street, and IR’s job is to know in advance how the sell- and the
buy-sides are used to seeing management presentations. In other words, IR
must package the product for Wall Street, or the result will often be reflected
in valuation.
In addition, presentation skills are important because The Street naturally
judges one management team relative to the next. Management should
be enthusiastic and dynamic, yet avoid being promotional. In addition, companies
should always refrain from addressing valuation. In other words,
hearing management make an argument that its stock is undervalued is a
turnoff. This is the domain of the professionals in the audience, and conclusions
on valuation should be left to them. Management’s job is to generate
financial performance and deliver results in the most consistent and transparent
manner possible.
Below is a suggested outline for the presentation slides and is by no
means the only way to construct them. However, it might be a successful
guide in tailoring a presentation for a specific company. A solid presentation
should include:
Market data: stock symbol, exchange, current price, and shares outstanding,
which leads the viewer to market capitalization.
Company overview: the description of the business, management and
experience, market position or niche, and historic EPS growth.
Strategic initiatives: the plan for earnings growth.
Company financials: a snapshot of the numbers with quarterly, year-todate,
and historical (last three years) information. It also includes
gross margins and operating margins (sometimes by segment), and
current status of the balance sheet. For companies that use significant
debt to expand their business, this might be interest coverage,
while debt-free businesses, like retailers, might profile the current
ratio (current assets divided by current liabilities).
Key investment highlights: The five or six points on why the company is
a good investment.
MEETING MANAGEMENT IN BAD TIMES TOO
No matter the forum, nothing builds management credibility more than
showing up and facing the music when things are bad. When an event occurs
that pushes the stock down, management should consider going on the road
with an analyst to visit institutions or attending a conference.
This might seem counterintuitive, but the action itself can add to longterm
valuation. A portfolio manager who knows that management will be
available during bad times knows he’ll be able to have access and get the information
needed to make a decision. Management teams that hide when
times are bad may never get a second chance with an experienced investor.
Also, in many of these meetings, the audience will be welcoming, because
they’ll likely see the drop in the stock as an opportunity and potentially soak
up some of the share supply as its being dumped on the market. Therefore,
as unpleasant as it may seem, organizing a road show when the company
may be at its worst can make management look its best.
THE STREET AND THE COMPANY
Meeting The Street is about building and maintaining the dialogue, in good
times and bad. A solid relationship between management and the investment
community can only help a company when the inevitable, unpredictable
event occurs.