CHAPTER 24 Event Management
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As part of the Dialogue stage, IR must react appropriately to positive and
negative events, in order to enhance or preserve valuation at any given
time. To best anticipate and negotiate the inevitable, IR must (a) always have
the proper information available in the form of market data and market
feedback, (b) have a relationship with the CEO based on respect so that
management can absorb and take direction from IR depending on the circumstances,
and (c) help management plan its short- and long-term strategies
with an understanding of the potential effects on the market.
INFORMATION FLOW
In order to make an informed decision based on unexpected events, IR must
have the proper information available at all times. For internal IR at a larger
company, this means subscribing directly to third-party information vendors.
A smaller company can depend on agencies for these services. In addition
to the important real-time data, IR must also gather investor perception
and feedback, and combining the two should make any tough decision that
much easier.
Third-Party Information Systems
In order to monitor the markets and the unexpected events that invariably
occur, IR must have access to the following:
Stock quotes: Not only the company’s day-to-day stock price movements,
but its peer group’s. This is the first line of defense in keeping an
eye on market perception of an individual company or group.
First Call: A company can gauge the effectiveness of its message and
guidance by checking analyst research and recommendations and, of
course, the First Call earnings estimates. IR should also gather research
reports on competitors and the sector, and process any new information
that surfaces.
Trading: The Autex Rankings gather trading volume in stocks by investment
bank and shows which banks are active in any particular stock
at any given time. These figures can be an indicator of company or sector
expertise, or the banks’ willingness to commit capital on the trading
desk.
Ownership: IR needs to extract, from shareholder databases, a list of
the new owners, existing owners who have added to their positions, and
those who have sold their stock. This is mandatory when performing a
cross-ownership analysis for targeting, particularly when a stock is
dropping.
Conference call transcripts: Transcripts are the best way to track material
events in the industry.
IR should package this information for management, so they can
glimpse a quarterly scorecard of sorts and form an idea of how the company
is being perceived against its peers.
Garnering Feedback
Part of that packaged information should also include old-fashioned buyand
sell-side feedback. This information, in the form of informal conversations,
estimate revisions or recommendation changes, or the actual buying
or selling of stock, is the purest form of judgment. But feedback sometimes
can be tough to find.
Analysts
In terms of the sell-side, even a 15-minute conversation during earnings season
can be asking a lot, so IR must come across as an informed peer who can
talk credibly about valuation and industry events. Also, if IR can be a gatekeeper
to a deeper relationship with management, that will also earn respect.
Ultimately, IR must use whatever leverage it has to engage the analyst and
extract the market’s current perception. An inexperienced subordinate, with
a checklist list of questions will almost always be ineffective.
Investors
Investors purchase stocks because they believe the financial outlook is positive
relative to the current price, and they sell stocks when they believe the
opposite is true.
Investors with large stakes in companies have a particular interest that
the company do well financially, and this objective gives IR an opportunity
to reach into the thought processes of the buy-side and garner any
perception that’s relevant, such as the investment highlights as the PM
sees them.
Information from an institution that has not purchased stock in the
company, but is buying the competition, is equally valuable to IR. Obtaining
this investor’s insights can lead to uniquely helpful and constructive criticism.
These are tough-to-access, unique opinions because the investor is obviously
interested and bullish on the sector, but has some reservations about
the company in question. Perhaps the investor is harboring reservations
about the success of the business or even skepticism about management.
Short Sellers
Similarly, IR should always be aware of short interest and why certain investors
are betting that the company won’t live up to expectations. Although
short sellers are tough investors for IR to pin down directly, even
the second-hand story can give management the ammunition to prepare a
counter argument.
Wall Street’s Hot Buttons
In any given sector at any given time, companies are doing business and generating
news. Because the stock market moves on how that news might affect
financial performance, it’s safe to say that there is always something to
react to in the IR department. Examples are foreign exchange rates, a pending
port strike, back to school’s shaping of inventory levels, a shift in demographics,
a thrust in teen spending, or the overcrowding of a market that
stalls expansion and suppresses growth. IR should always be prepared to tailor
dialogue based on the issues affecting the company’s sector.
This awareness is especially important when drafting the conference call
script and deciding which issues require emphasis or even inclusion.
Another method of handling unforeseen events is to launch a pre-emptive
strike and take control of the information. Tread Lightly, a footwear manufacturer, had a large amount of its business flowing through one retailer.
Thanks to Regulation FD, companies can’t disclose anything to The
Street that IR professionals can’t also access.
The IR community discovered that the retailer was receiving certain exclusive
agreements from a competitor, Putya Foot Down. We knew that the
retailer was not receiving any such agreements from Tread Lightly, and that
these agreements would give the retailer incentive to feature Putya Foot
Down products to shoppers with price reductions and special displays. This
would, of course, hurt Tread Lightly’s volume and presumably its stock
price.
Given that the retailer was Tread Lightly’s biggest customer, investors
and analysts would estimate a drop in sales. Tread Lightly’s IR advisors had
the company consider this possibility before The Street did so that they
could reconcile it with their strategy, make adjustments, and address the
issue with the investment community.
Another reason to stay on top of industry events is to draft off of others’
momentum. A company had recently licensed a hot brand for one of its
product lines. IR heard from The Street that a huge retailer was touting this
particular brand, cheering its recent volume in its stores. The opportunity Swell Sweaters Inc. and Sophisticated Shirts Corp., two companies in
the clothing industry, were trading at similar multiples. Then Swell
Sweaters started doing very well based on an emerging sports trend
while Sophisticated Shirts was pulled down by a portfolio that, by contrast,
seemed outdated.
Timeless Tops also competed in this sector. They had the preppy
image as well, but their value and quality stayed popular with teens.
Yet, Timeless Tops’ stock was trading at a discount, and IR’s information
(stock performance, First Call, shareholder analysis) pointed to the
fact that the preppy image was probably the reason.
IR wasn’t sure, though, and reached out to The Street for reconnaissance.
After talks with several portfolio managers, IR found, instead,
that the concern was low inventory and faltering sales. This news
was delivered back to Timeless Tops and a strategy emerged.
Their next communication to The Street immediately addressed
these issues and articulated current initiatives as part of the company’s
strategy. The misperception was corrected, but without the proper information,
handling this event would have been impossible.
arose for the company to capitalize on the buzz and start communicating its
success with the brand but in a context that included conservative guidance.
This easy, quick maneuver gained significant IR and PR attention, positioning
the company to exceed estimates and create long-term value.
Analysts and investors see many companies fail to stay in touch with
trends that affect valuation within their own sector. IR needs to remain diligent
for management, collect the information, interpret it, and determine
what course is best to maximize valuation.
If IR doesn’t already know the sector’s overarching messages each quarter,
it’s bound to discover them too late. Anticipating these hot buttons keeps
the company ahead of the audience.
THE IR/CEO RELATIONSHIP
The most crucial element for productive dialogue with The Street is the management/
IR relationship. IR must be an effective and reliable liaison between
The Street and the company, and the CEO must believe that IR lends him or
her a new perspective. Too many yes-men around the CEO can be awful for
shareholders, but sometimes a domineering CEO has no interest in hearing
critical feedback. The role of the IRO or the outside IR counsel is to bridge
the gap between the company and the capital markets, stand up to the CEO
when no one else will, and bring Wall Street’s perspective to the discussion.
The Emperor Has No Clothes
For IR to be effective, management and the board of directors must trust the
function and give IR full immunity to create a secure conduit to and from
The Street. Given the fact that access is king on Wall Street, and criticizing a
CEO jeopardizes that access, some management teams become insulated
from reality, particularly when the CEO’s ego is an issue. This situation demands
a strong, objective hand to come in for a reality check.
In 2002, a fairly new, but very successful technology company saw its
products gathering momentum. As a result of its success, the company publicly
set high financial goals, which seemed set to garner a high short-term
valuation. Subsequently, executives felt pressure to meet those goals and
were trapped in a make-the-number pattern that crushed so many companies
at that time.
Management, as well as IR, failed this company in several respects.
There was no managing of expectations, guidance was aggressive, short-term
Bankers came to management with a few solutions. One suggested
that Paperclip consider an acquisition to build the business. Another
thought that management should refinance the bank debt with an issue
of high-yield bonds. Yet another suggested selling the company.
An IR audit included a discussion with the buy- and sell-sides. Both
analysts and investors felt that management had an antagonistic attitude
toward the capital markets and was unwilling to listen to feedback,
often fighting back when analysts shared criticism or shutting off
investors who had complaints. The Street also felt that quarter after
quarter, the company would hold back bad news, even when they knew
they were going to hit unexpected, one-time charges that would cause
the earnings to fall short.
This management team was fighting the entire credibility checklist.
Within the company there was no accountability, the numbers were not
transparent, the managers didn’t anticipate problems, and they were
hardly visible to The Street. The Street didn’t care what the value
proposition was, because management had no standing with the investment
community.
IR brought the information back to management. The good news
was that The Street felt Paperclip’s stock could be very attractive if
management pulled its act together. The bad news was that management’s
lack of credibility had sunk the valuation to such depths that
each of the capitalization maneuvers they were considering offered only
symptomatic relief; none, even selling the company, would bring the
shareholders the value that the board felt was appropriate.
Paperclip needed to reposition its story and regain Wall Street’s
trust. IR suggested making the following changes and communicating
them on the next conference call:
Change the tone of all communications from defensive and arrogant
to conciliatory.
Streamline the profile to reflect a simple, organized business model.
Organize an internal audit to create department-by-department accountability.
Direct valuations to focus on EBITDA, not earnings.
Begin cost-cutting initiatives.
(continued)
Other credibility cases don’t turn out as well. Inevitably, despite the best
strategies, negative opinions surface. Because a lot of money is on the line
when analysts make a positive or a negative recommendation, they are very
careful in their assessment of management and in their valuation argument.
One thing that some management teams fail to recognize, however, is
that nothing personal is involved in the process. It’s simply an opinion based
on assumption. Companies that fail to understand this and publicly antagonize
analysts simply end up looking foolish, demonstrating a lack of capital
markets savvy and, ultimately, hurting shareholders.
Executives must find a way to absorb negative opinions and not get into
a defensive volley with analysts, although it happens frequently. Several instances
of management-analyst antagonism have occurred in the past few
years. According to a June 19, 2003, article in The Wall Street Journal, after
two Morgan Stanley analysts questioned Qwest Communications’ accounting,
Qwest denied analyst access to Morgan Stanley and wouldn’t consider
the firm for banking business. The Journal also stated that a former chief executive
“publicly derided the analysts and questioned the integrity of their
work.” Morgan Stanley continued to downgrade the stock to a Sell rating.
The Journal article also reported on a telecommunications analyst at J.P.
Morgan Chase who questioned whether Nextel Communications was lowballing
its bad debt estimates. Within hours, the Journal said, Nextel’s CFO
was on the phone to the analyst’s boss, “accusing the analyst of faulty work.”
In these situations, the companies looked foolish, management lost credibility,
and the shareholders suffered because the stocks dropped. IR with an
understanding of the research process could have headed off this antagonism
and subsequent damage to valuation.
Ultimately, if a company wants to be public and benefit from raising
capital and selling shares, CEOs and CFOs have to understand Wall Street
and also accept the negatives.
Each of these moves sent a signal to The Street that Paperclip’s
management team was accountable, transparent, credible, and candid.
The bankers stepped back and investors stayed with the stock or became
newly involved.
This company had a good business, a good story, and a good plan.
IR helped them adapt short-term goals that would stay true to the longterm
strategy and keep the company honest with The Street. The dissemination
of this story to The Street gained the company increased
coverage and new sell-side distribution and buy-side volume.
Being Upfront with Information
Human nature is to want to position any event in the best light possible, but
analysts are skeptical about promotion. Using superlatives that generate
high expectations puts more risk in the public domain than most analysts or
investors are willing to tolerate; more often than not, analysts and the buyside
steer clear of a heavily promoted stock. For that reason, any company
that tries to spin an obviously negative event into something positive will be
found out in due time. Management credibility and company valuation will
be erased.
HANDLING BAD EVENTS (AND LOWERING GUIDANCE)
Three basics apply to IR’s handling of bad events: don’t delay, don’t divide,
and don’t diminish.
1. Don’t delay: Management should weigh the benefits against the risk of
being one of the last companies in an industry to report. If a material
event occurs and there are risks of rumors in the marketplace, management
wants investors to hear the news from them first. It’s far better to
take control of the situation and define the problem rather than sitting
on bad news and allowing rumors to define the company’s reality. Management
should get a handle on what the news means to the bottom line
and deliver it.
2. Don’t divide: Telling the whole story to all constituents at once helps
“One of the most important things a CFO must do is articulately communicate
what is going on in the company to outside constituents and
do it with credibility. That’s always been important, but it’s even more
so today.
—David Viniar, CFO, Goldman Sachs
“You get no pretense with David. He’s the opposite of slick. In evaluating
a complex company that takes on a lot of risk, like Goldman,
that makes me comfortable,”
—anonymous investor on David Viniar.
Source: February 2004 Institutional Investor
take the risk out of the news, even if it’s bad. Ideally, management
should never allow another shoe to drop. If bad news does dribble out,
the analyst has no choice but to negatively comment on every announcement.
This painful, drawn-out process will affect future earnings
and the stock’s multiple will likely compress.
A slow roll-out of bad news has a ripple effect as the media latches
on to the problems, and as employees and vendors lose confidence in
management. These factors can fundamentally weaken the business,
leading to a low valuation and a high cost of capital.
Companies need to get all bad news out at once if possible. Explain
it, quantify it, boil it down to conservative earnings guidance, and rebuild
the share base through effective targeting.
3. Don’t diminish: Management must be transparent and accountable
because analysts ultimately listen to management teams that own up
to mistakes. They don’t want to hear excuses that downplay the
news.
We knew a company that treated earnings releases as an opportunity to
promote the business. They glossed over financial results in favor of promotional
language that always cast the business in the best light. The fact was,
management was viewed poorly by The Street despite their chronically rosy
outlook that attempted to perpetually mask poor earnings. That game can
be played only so many times without investors running for the exits. In fact,
they did.
Another often-used excuse is blaming poor earnings on events outside of
management’s control, such as the economy, weather, or our recent favorite,
“geopolitical issues.” This type of deflection, although sometimes very true,
can often be a management crutch. One company had for several quarters
had been blaming sub-par performance on the economy. At the same time
industry peers were announcing positive results in those same markets due
to a rebounding economy. IR’s job is to monitor competitor results because,
as in this case, it can avoid embarrassment. Had management blamed the
economy again when others were doing well, credibility would have been
further damaged. This is just another example of a proactive IR effort managing
an unexpected event.
THE OPTIMAL TIME TO LOWER GUIDANCE
One of the most important events that a management team faces is lowering
guidance. In determining the best time to do so, IR should take into account
stock price and valuation. That check can be the difference between the
stock getting trounced and the stock increasing on high volume.
If the stock price is at a 52-week low, the valuation is at a big discount
to its peer group, and the analyst community is relatively disengaged—that
is, no one has a Strong Buy rating—management has greater leeway to reduce
guidance without hurting the analyst, the investor, or its own credibility.
In all likelihood The Street is expecting very little from management performance-
wise given this scenario, and the market might just be waiting for
management to reassess its expected earnings guidance. Bringing guidance
down under these circumstances would result in lower risk, more attention,
and probably an increased stock price.
However, if the valuation is high—say, because the CEO wanted to use
25 percent EPS guidance rather than 15 percent as the IRO suggested—management
must take its medicine and lower expectations. To minimize the
risk, the company should do this after the market closes in a press release
with a simultaneous conference call to explain the factors. This is the best
way to lessen the risk of a situation that management and IR both know will
result in a falling stock price.
When readjusting guidance, management cannot be married to a bestcase
number. In fact, given the choice of lowering a $1.10 estimate by $0.05
or $0.10, management should always take the latter, particularly if the stock
is drifting downward. The reason is that another $0.05 reduction isn’t going
to matter as much to The Street as if the company positions itself to miss revised
guidance. Additionally, when setting guidance, management must do
so with an eye to the future. Most events are usually not a one-quarter phenomenon,
and The Street will suspect that subsequent quarters may come in
low. When the company sets guidance, it needs to establish a conservative
cushion for the rest of the year, without, of course, setting itself up to materially
exceed the number either. To set the company up for success, guidance
must be both realistic and achievable.
HANDLING GOOD EVENTS
One quarter after another of terrific results is every company’s dream, but
this is where IR hits the double diamond trails of keeping a check on management
ego and managing The Street’s expectations. In order to stay on
course and not be dissuaded by the stock price, IR must script a bit of conservatism
or push back in every quarter when there is great success. Management
must always be in control of its numbers via guidance, and an analyst
or two over-hyping the company is an analyst or two too many.
Another by-product of positive news is the invariable analyst downgrade.
As mentioned throughout this book, analysts are in the business of
generating commissions; therefore, a large part of their job is to upgrade and
downgrade stocks. In theory, this activity guides the decisions of the buy-side
and in the process drives trading volumes for the investment bank.
The analyst downgrade should never be taken personally, and CEOs
should understand that when his or her stock price reaches the analyst target,
action will be taken. Either the analyst will up the price target and reiterate
her Buy rating or downgrade the stock, saying it’s fully valued.
IR’s task, through conservative guidance primarily, is to manage expectations
to the point where the company has built significant credibility. At
that point, an analyst typically downgrades based on valuation only. In
other words, the analyst isn’t lowering his rating because the business model
is flawed or because management has lost credibility. He is lowering is because
the stock hit the target price.
This downgrade is the best that a company can hope for, and it might
read something like this:
Analyst Paul Hewson from American Securities writes, “Based solely on
valuation, we are lowering our rating to Underperform from Marketperform.
We continue to view this as a good company that has met or
exceeded our expectations. However, with the sharp run-up in share
price, we believe the stock is considerably ahead of current expectations.
Victory’s stock has appreciated by more than 40% in the last couple of
months, from the mid-teens to more than $20 per share. Our 12 month
price target remains unchanged.”
Again, managing the analyst community relative to good news is just as
important as doing so when the news is bad. Because the buy-side pays more
attention to the content of any report versus the rating, a downgrade such as
the one above is a big victory for the company and IR.
How does a company control investor expectations when the business is
on fire? An article in The Wall Street Journal, March 25, 2004, was titled
“Investors Cut Starbucks Some Rare Slack.” With the subhead, “Coffee
Chain’s Decade of Frothy Performance Overshadows Chairman’s Growth
Warning.”
The article states: “When a top executive warns investors that his company
won’t be able to sustain its rate of growth, the result is usually a stock
sell off. But that didn’t happen on Feb. 25th when Howard Shultz, chairman
of Starbucks Corp., announced that the world’s largest chain of coffee shops
couldn’t keep getting larger at rates as fast as 32%. Sure the stock slipped,
but only 3.4%, and then it bounced back a day or two, perhaps because the
company nevertheless stood by double-digit sales-growth expectations. As
for analysts, their recommendations remained neutral or positive, with most
of them predicting that Starbucks would outperform the market. This faith
in Starbucks certainly doesn’t arise from any sense that the stock is undervalued.
In recent days, the price-to-earnings ratio of Starbucks stock has
flirted with 50, making it one of the most expensive stocks on Wall Street.”
. . . “Rather, the market reaction—or lack of reaction—suggests that a rare
type of credibility gap is developing between Starbucks and the Street. It is
the opposite of the gap that forms between hype-prone executives and shareholders.
This type of gap reflects no suspicion, no sense among investors that
the executive is trying to fool them or gin up a quick bump in the stock; instead,
there’s a sense that this executive is hard on himself and his company,
and therefore his self-effacement isn’t entirely credible.” The article compares
this credibility gap with that developed around Warren Buffett and the
late Sam Walton.
This approach to restraining, or at least trying to restrain, The Street allows
management to focus on the business and The Street to worry about
valuation.
MANAGEMENT AND LANGUAGE
One of the most important parts of a company’s ongoing dialogue with The
Street is the actual language that’s used on a day-to-day basis. To that end,
management and IR shouldn’t underestimate the impact of the words they
use. For example, if a CEO is asked how he feels about his company’s most
recent guidance and starts his answer with the phrase, “Several things have
to happen for us to deliver . . . ,” investors might sell a share or two.
In order to script and oversee a conservative communication’s plan, IR
has to make sure that all language is tempered and delivered in terms that
The Street is used to hearing. A company should never say emphatically that
“we will,” but rather “we believe,” “we should,” or “we expect.”
Nor can the language be nebulous. A company which states that they
are going to “make a significant investment in cap ex” or “generate substantial
earnings potential” without quantifying such terms is giving openended
guidance, which is dangerous. Analysts and investors must translate
words to numbers or any number of variations could come out of those
phrases. For example, “substantial earnings potential” from a new initiative
might mean 5 cents in one analyst’s model and 15 cents in another analyst’s
model. The result would be a wide-ranging, higher than intended, First Call
consensus estimate that management, deep down, knows is unattainable.
Words, whether referring to guidance or when issuing new news, should always
be quantified, with an earnings per share range and a time frame that
foots with that financial guidance.
Words are just the beginning. As we mentioned earlier, in the late summer
of 2003, the SEC cited a Reg FD violation based on “tone, emphasis
and demeanor” to Schering-Plough. The IRO was present at the time of
the infraction, which illuminates the fact that even some of biggest IR executives
can’t be expert enough on the ever-changing regulations on financial
disclosure. Staying within the limits of the right words and phrases,
not to mention the appropriate body language is not easy. That’s what
makes systematic, scripted disclosure, with clear and quantifiable guidance,
essential.
Finally, it’s also helpful in the Dialogue stage if everyone is speaking the
same language.
Big Hand Accessories, a consumer products company, kept telling The
Street that their business wasn’t seasonal, and that, in fact, the reason
the company was so profitable was because it was not seasonal, which
was confusing to IR consultants who worked with them. Their accessories
clearly sold better in summer than winter.
When we asked the CEO about this, he explained that when they
were not selling in North America, they were selling in Australia at a
different time of year. He was quite surprised when we told him that by
using the word “seasonal,” not only was he not clearly explaining the
situation, but he was creating the impression that he didn’t understand
it either.
Curious that this didn’t come up in calls, the IR team asked some
of the analysts and investors why they had never questioned the CEO
on his use of this word. They said that they thought that they were
missing something obvious and they were waiting to figure it out before
asking.
IR decided to clear this up and scripted the next call to do just that.
In the call, the CEO explained that the business adapts to the market
with less SKUs by creating products that avoid obsolescence because
they transfer easily.
That solved that problem.
THE MARKET EFFECTS OF SHORT- AND
LONG-TERM STRATEGIES
On a quarter-to-quarter basis, P&L and balance sheet items change with financial
performance, and each change is another event that must be properly
explained to Wall Street. Although this book certainly couldn’t address
every possible variation, in most situations strategic IR is able to clarify the
issues and communicate them properly.
State of Affairs and Their Effects
LIFO, FIFO: Inventory levels send strong signals to The Street and may be
misinterpreted if they’re not backed by a logical story. For example, slower
inventory turns can sometimes foretell an earnings slowdown, or a retailer
may experience inventory levels that appear higher than sales can sustain.
In many industries, inventory levels and turns are cyclical, but sometimes
they indicate a particular shift in the marketplace. This situation can
be specific to a particular company, because of something that’s happened to
its product or service or those of its competitors. Or the situation can be specific
to the industry, like a shift in demographics or the economy that affects
buying tendencies or consumer tastes.
Investors that smell an inventory problem on the balance sheet may
be prompted to sell shares. But if the company has the chance to explain
that these inventory levels are built into the projections for, let’s say, new
stores coming on line, a shifting marketplace, or a proven strategy, the investors
will see a viable asset, one that will be monetized and benefit the bottom
line.
A/R and COGS: There are times when expenses, specifically cost of
goods sold (COGS), are contested. This can happen when companies do not
believe that they owe their suppliers or vendors certain expenses or that they
were overcharged for expenses that are directly related to the cost of making
the products they sell.
Some companies, when they contest this number, may assume they are
either not going to have to pay the contested amount or that they are going
to get a refund on payments already made. Then they don’t even recognize
this expense as a cost at all, deleting it altogether from COGS. Those who
expect a refund may go so far as to book it as a receivable. This type of expense
refuting or refund claim inflates earnings. If Wall Street sees this tactic
in the footnotes of the financials, or hears that it is surfacing as a practice of
a management team, The Street will very quickly penalize the stock and subtract
credibility points from the CEO.
Such talk arose among several portfolio managers who owned big
chunks of real estate in the form of REITs. They thought this accounting
issue was occurring among tenants and landlords of certain commercial
properties and might become a material revelation. Concerned their stocks
would fall if news of the problem were true, they sent a ripple of warning
out to the companies. The companies now knew that The Street strongly
disagreed with the practice and that there was a chance that valuations
would be adversely affected if the issue came to light.
Obviously, both sides of the business-to-business relationship were vulnerable.
If the landlords in this case had overcharged, then they had overreported
revenue for that period. If the tenants were underreporting the
COGS expense, then they were possibly hiding millions of dollars of gross
margin expense. Both sides were potentially enhancing earnings.
The fact is that in these scenarios, where a business or a division is playing
an accounting game to shore up numbers, the CEO and CFO will be exposed
every time. Wall Street is always checking the notes and assumption
behind COGS and other line items, and management must always acknowledge
it. Though an income statement can be somewhat manipulated,
the discrepancies will always come out in the cash flow statement. To that
end, earnings quality should always be identified by IR and expressed
accordingly.
NOLs: Net operating loss (NOL) carry forwards are one of the
subjects that create confusion among management teams with regard
to communication. Many companies intentionally report and highlight
the untaxed number because of the net operating loss, but fail to mention
the NOL outright because the reported number might not be viewed as very
high after all.
This approach works in management’s favor, until they’ve run out of
the net income sheltering NOLs (when earnings will again be fully taxed).
This fully taxed year will not compare favorably to the untaxed year, and
the company’s year-over-year comparisons will look as if the underlying
business experienced serious erosion when, in reality, pretax net income increased.
Unfortunately, this company put itself in an awkward situation
for a perceived short-term gain, and it all could have been avoided if the
company had presented earnings as pro forma fully taxed despite the untaxed
GAAP number. A simple GAAP-to-pro forma reconciliation would
have kept the communications sound and within the current rules.
Any decent analyst will see the NOLs as temporary anyway, and value
them on a present value basis (because it’s real future cash that the company
can invest over time).
Cash
Cash on the balance sheet can be viewed as positive or negative. A lot of
cash can peg a management team as too conservative, unwilling to undertake
prudent risk. It can also signal a business that legitimately has few reinvestment
opportunities. Therefore, analysts should know that the company
has plans for its cash, whether it be for share repurchasing, dividends, research
and development, or capital spending. After all, the stock market is
about return on investment over and above the bond market, and over and
above the 1 percent or 2 percent that can be generated in savings.
By investing in a new project, a company and investors expect a return
in the form of free cash flow. This, in turn, fuels a perpetual investment cycle
of cash generated from operations being invested in yet higher return projects.
That’s why investment pros look for management teams who can consistently
and over time drive return on equity and return on assets.
If a company is going to redeploy cash to increase shareholder value it
has to consider how each decision affects each type of investor and how the
cumulative action will affect value. The hope is that management is assessing
which alternatives can generate the greatest return on invested capital
for shareholders, and IR’s job is to position the outcome to buy- and sellside
analysts.
Light Bulb Ideas, a consumer electronics company, had just come out of
a cyclical downturn in its core business with a solid balance sheet, lots
of free cash flow, and numerous potential investment opportunities, including
acquisitions. The company recently initiated a dividend in light
of favorable dividend tax legislation.
Light Bulb Ideas had three large institutional shareholders. One
was a growth fund that was urging management to reinvest in the business
aggressively via capital expenditures and acquisition opportunities.
A second fund was a value fund that wanted management to utilize its
growing free cash flow and cash on hand to buy back stock to enhance
returns. A third fund was an income-oriented institution that wanted
management to increase the dividend.
Management posed the question, “What should we do when three
large shareholders are asking for three different things?” After some
(continued)
Similarly, if a company in mid-strategy changes tactics for its cash, it
needs to communicate the story behind that decision. For example, if a company
pulls back a dividend to use the cash for an acquisition, or invests in a
new product development instead of pursuing acquisitions, the effects of
each of these, to each type of investor, must be calculated and quantified.
Management should articulate its strategy and decision making with all
shareholders’ interests in mind.
Debt
Debt requires a continuous search for the lowest cost of capital to support
the optimal return on equity. Although good earnings or excess cash can
be used to pay off debt, companies are often wiser to maintain certain levels
of debt, as debt can be the cheapest money around (particularly in the past
few years).
However, The Street’s perception of different debt levels can have a sigcareful
analysis and in-depth discussions with senior management, an
IR team suggested they do what they have been doing best: run the business.
But they also needed to communicate better to shareholders just
how they were running that business.
To knowledgeable observers, the company seemed overfocused on
what shareholders had to say and factored these cluttered messages into
their decisions. What they should have been sharing with investors,
however, was the rigorous hurdle process they had for committing investor
capital, regardless of growth, value, or income orientation. Their
practice, before any of the company’s capital was ever put at risk, was
to complete a detailed rate of return analysis; managers were held to
performance standards based on that analysis. Before capital was reinvested
in the business or used for an acquisition, those returns were
compared to the benefits to shareholders of a stock buyback or an incremental
dividend.
Not only was this information very important to shareholders, but
it needed to be communicated to them. That information would serve
as the foundation to keep all three shareholder constituencies—growth,
value, and income—satisfied, because they would know that they had
a management team that was already looking out for their best interests
by taking shareholder input into consideration regarding capital
allocation decisions.
nificant effect on valuation. If debt is too low, investors may believe management
is playing it too safe with no pressure to be efficient. If debt is too
high, investors may feel interest payments are too burdensome to bring
much to the bottom line. What Wall Street likes is an optimal capital structure
that includes debt and equity, because the returns for shareholders can
be that much more magnified.
Dollar Sense, a company with a top-notch product offering and business
model in the finance sector, was trading at a heavy discount to its peers. It
was obvious that the company carried a lot of cash on their balance sheet
and had very little inventory, but it also had significant high-yield debt. The
Street saw this as a threat to profitability.
Some IR professionals, on the other hand, saw this as a terrific opportunity.
What we knew was that Dollar Sense had been forced to take this
high-yield debt after two banks consolidated and lumped Dollar Sense’s debt
into a sub-credit group, and Dollar Sense just assumed this was par for the
course. They could recapitalize their debt at a better rate, which seemed like
a terrific communications gem and a catalyst for improved earnings.
The first step was to clear the high cost of capital cloud hanging over
Dollar Sense and tell the story so that The Street would not think that the interest-
coverage threat was as real as the debt levels would suggest.
Once articulated, via a conference call, investors and analysts clearly realized
that the high cost of debt was not a liability to equity holders. Rather,
the debt was a catalyst for improved earnings because once the capital markets
realized that the company was now going to actively refinance this debt,
the cost of capital would eventually go down and there would be a financial
bump to earnings. In addition, the refinancing opportunity also was a “public
broadcast” that the company would recognize prepayment penalties, so
no investor would be surprised when it actually occurred.
By reconciling the balance sheet to the overall growth story we shifted a
perceived weakness into a strength. A strong company was signaling that it
was going to recapitalize, the bankers smelled opportunity to garner a client,
and the sell-side became further engaged. IR from a capital markets perspective
knew how to make the most of this information, attract bankers,
and position the company for enhanced visibility.
HORIZON THINKING
Ultimately, the stock market may overreact, either positively or negatively,
to any of the events or conditions we’ve mentioned in this chapter. But if the
company believes that the underlying financial outlook hasn’t changed, then
the short-term consequences of these overreactions shouldn’t be an urgent
matter. Stock prices don’t stay up or down forever, so if the company is confident
in the future, it should simply reposition relative to its peers, understand
that one investor’s weakness is another’s buying opportunity, and rely
on IR strategy to re-engage the market, albeit at a lower valuation. With the
proper guidance, the price will recover, assuming the financial results match
expectations.
As part of the Dialogue stage, IR must react appropriately to positive and
negative events, in order to enhance or preserve valuation at any given
time. To best anticipate and negotiate the inevitable, IR must (a) always have
the proper information available in the form of market data and market
feedback, (b) have a relationship with the CEO based on respect so that
management can absorb and take direction from IR depending on the circumstances,
and (c) help management plan its short- and long-term strategies
with an understanding of the potential effects on the market.
INFORMATION FLOW
In order to make an informed decision based on unexpected events, IR must
have the proper information available at all times. For internal IR at a larger
company, this means subscribing directly to third-party information vendors.
A smaller company can depend on agencies for these services. In addition
to the important real-time data, IR must also gather investor perception
and feedback, and combining the two should make any tough decision that
much easier.
Third-Party Information Systems
In order to monitor the markets and the unexpected events that invariably
occur, IR must have access to the following:
Stock quotes: Not only the company’s day-to-day stock price movements,
but its peer group’s. This is the first line of defense in keeping an
eye on market perception of an individual company or group.
First Call: A company can gauge the effectiveness of its message and
guidance by checking analyst research and recommendations and, of
course, the First Call earnings estimates. IR should also gather research
reports on competitors and the sector, and process any new information
that surfaces.
Trading: The Autex Rankings gather trading volume in stocks by investment
bank and shows which banks are active in any particular stock
at any given time. These figures can be an indicator of company or sector
expertise, or the banks’ willingness to commit capital on the trading
desk.
Ownership: IR needs to extract, from shareholder databases, a list of
the new owners, existing owners who have added to their positions, and
those who have sold their stock. This is mandatory when performing a
cross-ownership analysis for targeting, particularly when a stock is
dropping.
Conference call transcripts: Transcripts are the best way to track material
events in the industry.
IR should package this information for management, so they can
glimpse a quarterly scorecard of sorts and form an idea of how the company
is being perceived against its peers.
Garnering Feedback
Part of that packaged information should also include old-fashioned buyand
sell-side feedback. This information, in the form of informal conversations,
estimate revisions or recommendation changes, or the actual buying
or selling of stock, is the purest form of judgment. But feedback sometimes
can be tough to find.
Analysts
In terms of the sell-side, even a 15-minute conversation during earnings season
can be asking a lot, so IR must come across as an informed peer who can
talk credibly about valuation and industry events. Also, if IR can be a gatekeeper
to a deeper relationship with management, that will also earn respect.
Ultimately, IR must use whatever leverage it has to engage the analyst and
extract the market’s current perception. An inexperienced subordinate, with
a checklist list of questions will almost always be ineffective.
Investors
Investors purchase stocks because they believe the financial outlook is positive
relative to the current price, and they sell stocks when they believe the
opposite is true.
Investors with large stakes in companies have a particular interest that
the company do well financially, and this objective gives IR an opportunity
to reach into the thought processes of the buy-side and garner any
perception that’s relevant, such as the investment highlights as the PM
sees them.
Information from an institution that has not purchased stock in the
company, but is buying the competition, is equally valuable to IR. Obtaining
this investor’s insights can lead to uniquely helpful and constructive criticism.
These are tough-to-access, unique opinions because the investor is obviously
interested and bullish on the sector, but has some reservations about
the company in question. Perhaps the investor is harboring reservations
about the success of the business or even skepticism about management.
Short Sellers
Similarly, IR should always be aware of short interest and why certain investors
are betting that the company won’t live up to expectations. Although
short sellers are tough investors for IR to pin down directly, even
the second-hand story can give management the ammunition to prepare a
counter argument.
Wall Street’s Hot Buttons
In any given sector at any given time, companies are doing business and generating
news. Because the stock market moves on how that news might affect
financial performance, it’s safe to say that there is always something to
react to in the IR department. Examples are foreign exchange rates, a pending
port strike, back to school’s shaping of inventory levels, a shift in demographics,
a thrust in teen spending, or the overcrowding of a market that
stalls expansion and suppresses growth. IR should always be prepared to tailor
dialogue based on the issues affecting the company’s sector.
This awareness is especially important when drafting the conference call
script and deciding which issues require emphasis or even inclusion.
Another method of handling unforeseen events is to launch a pre-emptive
strike and take control of the information. Tread Lightly, a footwear manufacturer, had a large amount of its business flowing through one retailer.
Thanks to Regulation FD, companies can’t disclose anything to The
Street that IR professionals can’t also access.
The IR community discovered that the retailer was receiving certain exclusive
agreements from a competitor, Putya Foot Down. We knew that the
retailer was not receiving any such agreements from Tread Lightly, and that
these agreements would give the retailer incentive to feature Putya Foot
Down products to shoppers with price reductions and special displays. This
would, of course, hurt Tread Lightly’s volume and presumably its stock
price.
Given that the retailer was Tread Lightly’s biggest customer, investors
and analysts would estimate a drop in sales. Tread Lightly’s IR advisors had
the company consider this possibility before The Street did so that they
could reconcile it with their strategy, make adjustments, and address the
issue with the investment community.
Another reason to stay on top of industry events is to draft off of others’
momentum. A company had recently licensed a hot brand for one of its
product lines. IR heard from The Street that a huge retailer was touting this
particular brand, cheering its recent volume in its stores. The opportunity Swell Sweaters Inc. and Sophisticated Shirts Corp., two companies in
the clothing industry, were trading at similar multiples. Then Swell
Sweaters started doing very well based on an emerging sports trend
while Sophisticated Shirts was pulled down by a portfolio that, by contrast,
seemed outdated.
Timeless Tops also competed in this sector. They had the preppy
image as well, but their value and quality stayed popular with teens.
Yet, Timeless Tops’ stock was trading at a discount, and IR’s information
(stock performance, First Call, shareholder analysis) pointed to the
fact that the preppy image was probably the reason.
IR wasn’t sure, though, and reached out to The Street for reconnaissance.
After talks with several portfolio managers, IR found, instead,
that the concern was low inventory and faltering sales. This news
was delivered back to Timeless Tops and a strategy emerged.
Their next communication to The Street immediately addressed
these issues and articulated current initiatives as part of the company’s
strategy. The misperception was corrected, but without the proper information,
handling this event would have been impossible.
arose for the company to capitalize on the buzz and start communicating its
success with the brand but in a context that included conservative guidance.
This easy, quick maneuver gained significant IR and PR attention, positioning
the company to exceed estimates and create long-term value.
Analysts and investors see many companies fail to stay in touch with
trends that affect valuation within their own sector. IR needs to remain diligent
for management, collect the information, interpret it, and determine
what course is best to maximize valuation.
If IR doesn’t already know the sector’s overarching messages each quarter,
it’s bound to discover them too late. Anticipating these hot buttons keeps
the company ahead of the audience.
THE IR/CEO RELATIONSHIP
The most crucial element for productive dialogue with The Street is the management/
IR relationship. IR must be an effective and reliable liaison between
The Street and the company, and the CEO must believe that IR lends him or
her a new perspective. Too many yes-men around the CEO can be awful for
shareholders, but sometimes a domineering CEO has no interest in hearing
critical feedback. The role of the IRO or the outside IR counsel is to bridge
the gap between the company and the capital markets, stand up to the CEO
when no one else will, and bring Wall Street’s perspective to the discussion.
The Emperor Has No Clothes
For IR to be effective, management and the board of directors must trust the
function and give IR full immunity to create a secure conduit to and from
The Street. Given the fact that access is king on Wall Street, and criticizing a
CEO jeopardizes that access, some management teams become insulated
from reality, particularly when the CEO’s ego is an issue. This situation demands
a strong, objective hand to come in for a reality check.
In 2002, a fairly new, but very successful technology company saw its
products gathering momentum. As a result of its success, the company publicly
set high financial goals, which seemed set to garner a high short-term
valuation. Subsequently, executives felt pressure to meet those goals and
were trapped in a make-the-number pattern that crushed so many companies
at that time.
Management, as well as IR, failed this company in several respects.
There was no managing of expectations, guidance was aggressive, short-term
Bankers came to management with a few solutions. One suggested
that Paperclip consider an acquisition to build the business. Another
thought that management should refinance the bank debt with an issue
of high-yield bonds. Yet another suggested selling the company.
An IR audit included a discussion with the buy- and sell-sides. Both
analysts and investors felt that management had an antagonistic attitude
toward the capital markets and was unwilling to listen to feedback,
often fighting back when analysts shared criticism or shutting off
investors who had complaints. The Street also felt that quarter after
quarter, the company would hold back bad news, even when they knew
they were going to hit unexpected, one-time charges that would cause
the earnings to fall short.
This management team was fighting the entire credibility checklist.
Within the company there was no accountability, the numbers were not
transparent, the managers didn’t anticipate problems, and they were
hardly visible to The Street. The Street didn’t care what the value
proposition was, because management had no standing with the investment
community.
IR brought the information back to management. The good news
was that The Street felt Paperclip’s stock could be very attractive if
management pulled its act together. The bad news was that management’s
lack of credibility had sunk the valuation to such depths that
each of the capitalization maneuvers they were considering offered only
symptomatic relief; none, even selling the company, would bring the
shareholders the value that the board felt was appropriate.
Paperclip needed to reposition its story and regain Wall Street’s
trust. IR suggested making the following changes and communicating
them on the next conference call:
Change the tone of all communications from defensive and arrogant
to conciliatory.
Streamline the profile to reflect a simple, organized business model.
Organize an internal audit to create department-by-department accountability.
Direct valuations to focus on EBITDA, not earnings.
Begin cost-cutting initiatives.
(continued)
Other credibility cases don’t turn out as well. Inevitably, despite the best
strategies, negative opinions surface. Because a lot of money is on the line
when analysts make a positive or a negative recommendation, they are very
careful in their assessment of management and in their valuation argument.
One thing that some management teams fail to recognize, however, is
that nothing personal is involved in the process. It’s simply an opinion based
on assumption. Companies that fail to understand this and publicly antagonize
analysts simply end up looking foolish, demonstrating a lack of capital
markets savvy and, ultimately, hurting shareholders.
Executives must find a way to absorb negative opinions and not get into
a defensive volley with analysts, although it happens frequently. Several instances
of management-analyst antagonism have occurred in the past few
years. According to a June 19, 2003, article in The Wall Street Journal, after
two Morgan Stanley analysts questioned Qwest Communications’ accounting,
Qwest denied analyst access to Morgan Stanley and wouldn’t consider
the firm for banking business. The Journal also stated that a former chief executive
“publicly derided the analysts and questioned the integrity of their
work.” Morgan Stanley continued to downgrade the stock to a Sell rating.
The Journal article also reported on a telecommunications analyst at J.P.
Morgan Chase who questioned whether Nextel Communications was lowballing
its bad debt estimates. Within hours, the Journal said, Nextel’s CFO
was on the phone to the analyst’s boss, “accusing the analyst of faulty work.”
In these situations, the companies looked foolish, management lost credibility,
and the shareholders suffered because the stocks dropped. IR with an
understanding of the research process could have headed off this antagonism
and subsequent damage to valuation.
Ultimately, if a company wants to be public and benefit from raising
capital and selling shares, CEOs and CFOs have to understand Wall Street
and also accept the negatives.
Each of these moves sent a signal to The Street that Paperclip’s
management team was accountable, transparent, credible, and candid.
The bankers stepped back and investors stayed with the stock or became
newly involved.
This company had a good business, a good story, and a good plan.
IR helped them adapt short-term goals that would stay true to the longterm
strategy and keep the company honest with The Street. The dissemination
of this story to The Street gained the company increased
coverage and new sell-side distribution and buy-side volume.
Being Upfront with Information
Human nature is to want to position any event in the best light possible, but
analysts are skeptical about promotion. Using superlatives that generate
high expectations puts more risk in the public domain than most analysts or
investors are willing to tolerate; more often than not, analysts and the buyside
steer clear of a heavily promoted stock. For that reason, any company
that tries to spin an obviously negative event into something positive will be
found out in due time. Management credibility and company valuation will
be erased.
HANDLING BAD EVENTS (AND LOWERING GUIDANCE)
Three basics apply to IR’s handling of bad events: don’t delay, don’t divide,
and don’t diminish.
1. Don’t delay: Management should weigh the benefits against the risk of
being one of the last companies in an industry to report. If a material
event occurs and there are risks of rumors in the marketplace, management
wants investors to hear the news from them first. It’s far better to
take control of the situation and define the problem rather than sitting
on bad news and allowing rumors to define the company’s reality. Management
should get a handle on what the news means to the bottom line
and deliver it.
2. Don’t divide: Telling the whole story to all constituents at once helps
“One of the most important things a CFO must do is articulately communicate
what is going on in the company to outside constituents and
do it with credibility. That’s always been important, but it’s even more
so today.
—David Viniar, CFO, Goldman Sachs
“You get no pretense with David. He’s the opposite of slick. In evaluating
a complex company that takes on a lot of risk, like Goldman,
that makes me comfortable,”
—anonymous investor on David Viniar.
Source: February 2004 Institutional Investor
take the risk out of the news, even if it’s bad. Ideally, management
should never allow another shoe to drop. If bad news does dribble out,
the analyst has no choice but to negatively comment on every announcement.
This painful, drawn-out process will affect future earnings
and the stock’s multiple will likely compress.
A slow roll-out of bad news has a ripple effect as the media latches
on to the problems, and as employees and vendors lose confidence in
management. These factors can fundamentally weaken the business,
leading to a low valuation and a high cost of capital.
Companies need to get all bad news out at once if possible. Explain
it, quantify it, boil it down to conservative earnings guidance, and rebuild
the share base through effective targeting.
3. Don’t diminish: Management must be transparent and accountable
because analysts ultimately listen to management teams that own up
to mistakes. They don’t want to hear excuses that downplay the
news.
We knew a company that treated earnings releases as an opportunity to
promote the business. They glossed over financial results in favor of promotional
language that always cast the business in the best light. The fact was,
management was viewed poorly by The Street despite their chronically rosy
outlook that attempted to perpetually mask poor earnings. That game can
be played only so many times without investors running for the exits. In fact,
they did.
Another often-used excuse is blaming poor earnings on events outside of
management’s control, such as the economy, weather, or our recent favorite,
“geopolitical issues.” This type of deflection, although sometimes very true,
can often be a management crutch. One company had for several quarters
had been blaming sub-par performance on the economy. At the same time
industry peers were announcing positive results in those same markets due
to a rebounding economy. IR’s job is to monitor competitor results because,
as in this case, it can avoid embarrassment. Had management blamed the
economy again when others were doing well, credibility would have been
further damaged. This is just another example of a proactive IR effort managing
an unexpected event.
THE OPTIMAL TIME TO LOWER GUIDANCE
One of the most important events that a management team faces is lowering
guidance. In determining the best time to do so, IR should take into account
stock price and valuation. That check can be the difference between the
stock getting trounced and the stock increasing on high volume.
If the stock price is at a 52-week low, the valuation is at a big discount
to its peer group, and the analyst community is relatively disengaged—that
is, no one has a Strong Buy rating—management has greater leeway to reduce
guidance without hurting the analyst, the investor, or its own credibility.
In all likelihood The Street is expecting very little from management performance-
wise given this scenario, and the market might just be waiting for
management to reassess its expected earnings guidance. Bringing guidance
down under these circumstances would result in lower risk, more attention,
and probably an increased stock price.
However, if the valuation is high—say, because the CEO wanted to use
25 percent EPS guidance rather than 15 percent as the IRO suggested—management
must take its medicine and lower expectations. To minimize the
risk, the company should do this after the market closes in a press release
with a simultaneous conference call to explain the factors. This is the best
way to lessen the risk of a situation that management and IR both know will
result in a falling stock price.
When readjusting guidance, management cannot be married to a bestcase
number. In fact, given the choice of lowering a $1.10 estimate by $0.05
or $0.10, management should always take the latter, particularly if the stock
is drifting downward. The reason is that another $0.05 reduction isn’t going
to matter as much to The Street as if the company positions itself to miss revised
guidance. Additionally, when setting guidance, management must do
so with an eye to the future. Most events are usually not a one-quarter phenomenon,
and The Street will suspect that subsequent quarters may come in
low. When the company sets guidance, it needs to establish a conservative
cushion for the rest of the year, without, of course, setting itself up to materially
exceed the number either. To set the company up for success, guidance
must be both realistic and achievable.
HANDLING GOOD EVENTS
One quarter after another of terrific results is every company’s dream, but
this is where IR hits the double diamond trails of keeping a check on management
ego and managing The Street’s expectations. In order to stay on
course and not be dissuaded by the stock price, IR must script a bit of conservatism
or push back in every quarter when there is great success. Management
must always be in control of its numbers via guidance, and an analyst
or two over-hyping the company is an analyst or two too many.
Another by-product of positive news is the invariable analyst downgrade.
As mentioned throughout this book, analysts are in the business of
generating commissions; therefore, a large part of their job is to upgrade and
downgrade stocks. In theory, this activity guides the decisions of the buy-side
and in the process drives trading volumes for the investment bank.
The analyst downgrade should never be taken personally, and CEOs
should understand that when his or her stock price reaches the analyst target,
action will be taken. Either the analyst will up the price target and reiterate
her Buy rating or downgrade the stock, saying it’s fully valued.
IR’s task, through conservative guidance primarily, is to manage expectations
to the point where the company has built significant credibility. At
that point, an analyst typically downgrades based on valuation only. In
other words, the analyst isn’t lowering his rating because the business model
is flawed or because management has lost credibility. He is lowering is because
the stock hit the target price.
This downgrade is the best that a company can hope for, and it might
read something like this:
Analyst Paul Hewson from American Securities writes, “Based solely on
valuation, we are lowering our rating to Underperform from Marketperform.
We continue to view this as a good company that has met or
exceeded our expectations. However, with the sharp run-up in share
price, we believe the stock is considerably ahead of current expectations.
Victory’s stock has appreciated by more than 40% in the last couple of
months, from the mid-teens to more than $20 per share. Our 12 month
price target remains unchanged.”
Again, managing the analyst community relative to good news is just as
important as doing so when the news is bad. Because the buy-side pays more
attention to the content of any report versus the rating, a downgrade such as
the one above is a big victory for the company and IR.
How does a company control investor expectations when the business is
on fire? An article in The Wall Street Journal, March 25, 2004, was titled
“Investors Cut Starbucks Some Rare Slack.” With the subhead, “Coffee
Chain’s Decade of Frothy Performance Overshadows Chairman’s Growth
Warning.”
The article states: “When a top executive warns investors that his company
won’t be able to sustain its rate of growth, the result is usually a stock
sell off. But that didn’t happen on Feb. 25th when Howard Shultz, chairman
of Starbucks Corp., announced that the world’s largest chain of coffee shops
couldn’t keep getting larger at rates as fast as 32%. Sure the stock slipped,
but only 3.4%, and then it bounced back a day or two, perhaps because the
company nevertheless stood by double-digit sales-growth expectations. As
for analysts, their recommendations remained neutral or positive, with most
of them predicting that Starbucks would outperform the market. This faith
in Starbucks certainly doesn’t arise from any sense that the stock is undervalued.
In recent days, the price-to-earnings ratio of Starbucks stock has
flirted with 50, making it one of the most expensive stocks on Wall Street.”
. . . “Rather, the market reaction—or lack of reaction—suggests that a rare
type of credibility gap is developing between Starbucks and the Street. It is
the opposite of the gap that forms between hype-prone executives and shareholders.
This type of gap reflects no suspicion, no sense among investors that
the executive is trying to fool them or gin up a quick bump in the stock; instead,
there’s a sense that this executive is hard on himself and his company,
and therefore his self-effacement isn’t entirely credible.” The article compares
this credibility gap with that developed around Warren Buffett and the
late Sam Walton.
This approach to restraining, or at least trying to restrain, The Street allows
management to focus on the business and The Street to worry about
valuation.
MANAGEMENT AND LANGUAGE
One of the most important parts of a company’s ongoing dialogue with The
Street is the actual language that’s used on a day-to-day basis. To that end,
management and IR shouldn’t underestimate the impact of the words they
use. For example, if a CEO is asked how he feels about his company’s most
recent guidance and starts his answer with the phrase, “Several things have
to happen for us to deliver . . . ,” investors might sell a share or two.
In order to script and oversee a conservative communication’s plan, IR
has to make sure that all language is tempered and delivered in terms that
The Street is used to hearing. A company should never say emphatically that
“we will,” but rather “we believe,” “we should,” or “we expect.”
Nor can the language be nebulous. A company which states that they
are going to “make a significant investment in cap ex” or “generate substantial
earnings potential” without quantifying such terms is giving openended
guidance, which is dangerous. Analysts and investors must translate
words to numbers or any number of variations could come out of those
phrases. For example, “substantial earnings potential” from a new initiative
might mean 5 cents in one analyst’s model and 15 cents in another analyst’s
model. The result would be a wide-ranging, higher than intended, First Call
consensus estimate that management, deep down, knows is unattainable.
Words, whether referring to guidance or when issuing new news, should always
be quantified, with an earnings per share range and a time frame that
foots with that financial guidance.
Words are just the beginning. As we mentioned earlier, in the late summer
of 2003, the SEC cited a Reg FD violation based on “tone, emphasis
and demeanor” to Schering-Plough. The IRO was present at the time of
the infraction, which illuminates the fact that even some of biggest IR executives
can’t be expert enough on the ever-changing regulations on financial
disclosure. Staying within the limits of the right words and phrases,
not to mention the appropriate body language is not easy. That’s what
makes systematic, scripted disclosure, with clear and quantifiable guidance,
essential.
Finally, it’s also helpful in the Dialogue stage if everyone is speaking the
same language.
Big Hand Accessories, a consumer products company, kept telling The
Street that their business wasn’t seasonal, and that, in fact, the reason
the company was so profitable was because it was not seasonal, which
was confusing to IR consultants who worked with them. Their accessories
clearly sold better in summer than winter.
When we asked the CEO about this, he explained that when they
were not selling in North America, they were selling in Australia at a
different time of year. He was quite surprised when we told him that by
using the word “seasonal,” not only was he not clearly explaining the
situation, but he was creating the impression that he didn’t understand
it either.
Curious that this didn’t come up in calls, the IR team asked some
of the analysts and investors why they had never questioned the CEO
on his use of this word. They said that they thought that they were
missing something obvious and they were waiting to figure it out before
asking.
IR decided to clear this up and scripted the next call to do just that.
In the call, the CEO explained that the business adapts to the market
with less SKUs by creating products that avoid obsolescence because
they transfer easily.
That solved that problem.
THE MARKET EFFECTS OF SHORT- AND
LONG-TERM STRATEGIES
On a quarter-to-quarter basis, P&L and balance sheet items change with financial
performance, and each change is another event that must be properly
explained to Wall Street. Although this book certainly couldn’t address
every possible variation, in most situations strategic IR is able to clarify the
issues and communicate them properly.
State of Affairs and Their Effects
LIFO, FIFO: Inventory levels send strong signals to The Street and may be
misinterpreted if they’re not backed by a logical story. For example, slower
inventory turns can sometimes foretell an earnings slowdown, or a retailer
may experience inventory levels that appear higher than sales can sustain.
In many industries, inventory levels and turns are cyclical, but sometimes
they indicate a particular shift in the marketplace. This situation can
be specific to a particular company, because of something that’s happened to
its product or service or those of its competitors. Or the situation can be specific
to the industry, like a shift in demographics or the economy that affects
buying tendencies or consumer tastes.
Investors that smell an inventory problem on the balance sheet may
be prompted to sell shares. But if the company has the chance to explain
that these inventory levels are built into the projections for, let’s say, new
stores coming on line, a shifting marketplace, or a proven strategy, the investors
will see a viable asset, one that will be monetized and benefit the bottom
line.
A/R and COGS: There are times when expenses, specifically cost of
goods sold (COGS), are contested. This can happen when companies do not
believe that they owe their suppliers or vendors certain expenses or that they
were overcharged for expenses that are directly related to the cost of making
the products they sell.
Some companies, when they contest this number, may assume they are
either not going to have to pay the contested amount or that they are going
to get a refund on payments already made. Then they don’t even recognize
this expense as a cost at all, deleting it altogether from COGS. Those who
expect a refund may go so far as to book it as a receivable. This type of expense
refuting or refund claim inflates earnings. If Wall Street sees this tactic
in the footnotes of the financials, or hears that it is surfacing as a practice of
a management team, The Street will very quickly penalize the stock and subtract
credibility points from the CEO.
Such talk arose among several portfolio managers who owned big
chunks of real estate in the form of REITs. They thought this accounting
issue was occurring among tenants and landlords of certain commercial
properties and might become a material revelation. Concerned their stocks
would fall if news of the problem were true, they sent a ripple of warning
out to the companies. The companies now knew that The Street strongly
disagreed with the practice and that there was a chance that valuations
would be adversely affected if the issue came to light.
Obviously, both sides of the business-to-business relationship were vulnerable.
If the landlords in this case had overcharged, then they had overreported
revenue for that period. If the tenants were underreporting the
COGS expense, then they were possibly hiding millions of dollars of gross
margin expense. Both sides were potentially enhancing earnings.
The fact is that in these scenarios, where a business or a division is playing
an accounting game to shore up numbers, the CEO and CFO will be exposed
every time. Wall Street is always checking the notes and assumption
behind COGS and other line items, and management must always acknowledge
it. Though an income statement can be somewhat manipulated,
the discrepancies will always come out in the cash flow statement. To that
end, earnings quality should always be identified by IR and expressed
accordingly.
NOLs: Net operating loss (NOL) carry forwards are one of the
subjects that create confusion among management teams with regard
to communication. Many companies intentionally report and highlight
the untaxed number because of the net operating loss, but fail to mention
the NOL outright because the reported number might not be viewed as very
high after all.
This approach works in management’s favor, until they’ve run out of
the net income sheltering NOLs (when earnings will again be fully taxed).
This fully taxed year will not compare favorably to the untaxed year, and
the company’s year-over-year comparisons will look as if the underlying
business experienced serious erosion when, in reality, pretax net income increased.
Unfortunately, this company put itself in an awkward situation
for a perceived short-term gain, and it all could have been avoided if the
company had presented earnings as pro forma fully taxed despite the untaxed
GAAP number. A simple GAAP-to-pro forma reconciliation would
have kept the communications sound and within the current rules.
Any decent analyst will see the NOLs as temporary anyway, and value
them on a present value basis (because it’s real future cash that the company
can invest over time).
Cash
Cash on the balance sheet can be viewed as positive or negative. A lot of
cash can peg a management team as too conservative, unwilling to undertake
prudent risk. It can also signal a business that legitimately has few reinvestment
opportunities. Therefore, analysts should know that the company
has plans for its cash, whether it be for share repurchasing, dividends, research
and development, or capital spending. After all, the stock market is
about return on investment over and above the bond market, and over and
above the 1 percent or 2 percent that can be generated in savings.
By investing in a new project, a company and investors expect a return
in the form of free cash flow. This, in turn, fuels a perpetual investment cycle
of cash generated from operations being invested in yet higher return projects.
That’s why investment pros look for management teams who can consistently
and over time drive return on equity and return on assets.
If a company is going to redeploy cash to increase shareholder value it
has to consider how each decision affects each type of investor and how the
cumulative action will affect value. The hope is that management is assessing
which alternatives can generate the greatest return on invested capital
for shareholders, and IR’s job is to position the outcome to buy- and sellside
analysts.
Light Bulb Ideas, a consumer electronics company, had just come out of
a cyclical downturn in its core business with a solid balance sheet, lots
of free cash flow, and numerous potential investment opportunities, including
acquisitions. The company recently initiated a dividend in light
of favorable dividend tax legislation.
Light Bulb Ideas had three large institutional shareholders. One
was a growth fund that was urging management to reinvest in the business
aggressively via capital expenditures and acquisition opportunities.
A second fund was a value fund that wanted management to utilize its
growing free cash flow and cash on hand to buy back stock to enhance
returns. A third fund was an income-oriented institution that wanted
management to increase the dividend.
Management posed the question, “What should we do when three
large shareholders are asking for three different things?” After some
(continued)
Similarly, if a company in mid-strategy changes tactics for its cash, it
needs to communicate the story behind that decision. For example, if a company
pulls back a dividend to use the cash for an acquisition, or invests in a
new product development instead of pursuing acquisitions, the effects of
each of these, to each type of investor, must be calculated and quantified.
Management should articulate its strategy and decision making with all
shareholders’ interests in mind.
Debt
Debt requires a continuous search for the lowest cost of capital to support
the optimal return on equity. Although good earnings or excess cash can
be used to pay off debt, companies are often wiser to maintain certain levels
of debt, as debt can be the cheapest money around (particularly in the past
few years).
However, The Street’s perception of different debt levels can have a sigcareful
analysis and in-depth discussions with senior management, an
IR team suggested they do what they have been doing best: run the business.
But they also needed to communicate better to shareholders just
how they were running that business.
To knowledgeable observers, the company seemed overfocused on
what shareholders had to say and factored these cluttered messages into
their decisions. What they should have been sharing with investors,
however, was the rigorous hurdle process they had for committing investor
capital, regardless of growth, value, or income orientation. Their
practice, before any of the company’s capital was ever put at risk, was
to complete a detailed rate of return analysis; managers were held to
performance standards based on that analysis. Before capital was reinvested
in the business or used for an acquisition, those returns were
compared to the benefits to shareholders of a stock buyback or an incremental
dividend.
Not only was this information very important to shareholders, but
it needed to be communicated to them. That information would serve
as the foundation to keep all three shareholder constituencies—growth,
value, and income—satisfied, because they would know that they had
a management team that was already looking out for their best interests
by taking shareholder input into consideration regarding capital
allocation decisions.
nificant effect on valuation. If debt is too low, investors may believe management
is playing it too safe with no pressure to be efficient. If debt is too
high, investors may feel interest payments are too burdensome to bring
much to the bottom line. What Wall Street likes is an optimal capital structure
that includes debt and equity, because the returns for shareholders can
be that much more magnified.
Dollar Sense, a company with a top-notch product offering and business
model in the finance sector, was trading at a heavy discount to its peers. It
was obvious that the company carried a lot of cash on their balance sheet
and had very little inventory, but it also had significant high-yield debt. The
Street saw this as a threat to profitability.
Some IR professionals, on the other hand, saw this as a terrific opportunity.
What we knew was that Dollar Sense had been forced to take this
high-yield debt after two banks consolidated and lumped Dollar Sense’s debt
into a sub-credit group, and Dollar Sense just assumed this was par for the
course. They could recapitalize their debt at a better rate, which seemed like
a terrific communications gem and a catalyst for improved earnings.
The first step was to clear the high cost of capital cloud hanging over
Dollar Sense and tell the story so that The Street would not think that the interest-
coverage threat was as real as the debt levels would suggest.
Once articulated, via a conference call, investors and analysts clearly realized
that the high cost of debt was not a liability to equity holders. Rather,
the debt was a catalyst for improved earnings because once the capital markets
realized that the company was now going to actively refinance this debt,
the cost of capital would eventually go down and there would be a financial
bump to earnings. In addition, the refinancing opportunity also was a “public
broadcast” that the company would recognize prepayment penalties, so
no investor would be surprised when it actually occurred.
By reconciling the balance sheet to the overall growth story we shifted a
perceived weakness into a strength. A strong company was signaling that it
was going to recapitalize, the bankers smelled opportunity to garner a client,
and the sell-side became further engaged. IR from a capital markets perspective
knew how to make the most of this information, attract bankers,
and position the company for enhanced visibility.
HORIZON THINKING
Ultimately, the stock market may overreact, either positively or negatively,
to any of the events or conditions we’ve mentioned in this chapter. But if the
company believes that the underlying financial outlook hasn’t changed, then
the short-term consequences of these overreactions shouldn’t be an urgent
matter. Stock prices don’t stay up or down forever, so if the company is confident
in the future, it should simply reposition relative to its peers, understand
that one investor’s weakness is another’s buying opportunity, and rely
on IR strategy to re-engage the market, albeit at a lower valuation. With the
proper guidance, the price will recover, assuming the financial results match
expectations.