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Telling Congress About the Rigged Research Game (Cont'd)

Adam Lashinsky

07/31/01 - 03:10 PM EDT
Editor's note: TheStreet.com columnist Adam Lashinsky is testifying today before the House of Representatives Subcommittee on Capital Markets, Insurance, and Government-Sponsored Enterprises. The committee is investigating the quality of equity research and reporting available to the average U.S. investor. We are running Lashinsky's testimony in full and in three parts. This is the third and final part.


This committee is better off hearing from analysts about the pressures analysts face. But I talk to analysts and their clients every day, and I can give you some insight. One prominent analyst I know once described his job as having to be willing to come into work each day and get clobbered repeatedly by a two-by-four. Who's delivering the punishment? By turns: Retail brokerage clients unhappy with a recommendation that didn't work out, companies bothered by unfavorable commentary, institutional brokerage clients displeased at not getting the early word, investment banking colleagues peeved that some report hurt a deal. And so on.

This isn't to make you feel sorry for analysts. It's just that one begins to understand how a profession so badly conflicted could try so hard to please so many and end up pleasing so few.

And it's important to point out here, again, who's complaining about rotten research and who isn't. The primary audience for Wall Street research is the institutional investors who are trading clients of the firm -- the ones who understand best what the research is worth. They aren't typically disappointed by the quality of the work, at least not enough to complain about it. If they are disappointed, they hire their own researchers to investigate companies. All the best investors conduct their own research and use the sell side to supplement their data and test their conclusions. Who's left? The individual, who typically is not paying for the research but is reacting to things he or she heard on television. Let me state that a different way: The people complaining loudest about the quality of Wall Street research generally are the people who aren't paying for it.

Some Obvious and Not-So-Obvious Solutions

This committee seems to be taking the approach that its best role is to use its bully pulpit to get the market's participants to clean up their act rather than to propose structural reform. As a columnist and observer of the capital markets, I support that approach. Analysts should be encouraged to disclose their conflicts of interest. Reporters should be urged to be critical. Investors should be admonished to do their homework before buying securities. Investment banks should be embarrassed at the way they have misled the general public.

But there are other, more radical, approaches Congress, together with the SEC, could take.

Wall Street research during and after the stock-market bubble has become something of a joke. Analysts went from unknowns to superstars to goats in the span of five years. Fortunately, the market has a wonderful self-correcting mechanism. To restore its credibility, Wall Street is trying to promote the appearance of objectivity and independence in its research departments. Individual analysts are struggling to keep up in a Reg FD world and one where most of the participants now have the fabled decoder ring that lets them understand what analysts mean when they say buy, accumulate and hold, but rarely sell. As well, my sense is that the financial news media generally is embarrassed by its role and is correcting the situation by embracing its natural skepticism again.

For the time being, the investment-banking conflict will diminish because there is so little investment banking being committed. The key for this committee is to determine what regulatory oversight will be needed, if any, when the investment-banking machine cranks itself up again.

To return to the first part of Lashinsky's testimony, click here, and for the second part, click here.


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