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It is apparent that Wall Street is walking through the valley of the shadow of
death, as the well meaning public is increasingly becoming aware of the conflicts
of interest related to its research enterprise. The conflict is in differentiating
between sell-side and buy-side analysts. The former is the traditional brokerage
analyst. The latter is an investment-banking analyst, a product of corporate
finance. The dealmaker, or sometimes, just the dealmaker's analyst. I have
a name for them, but that's too crude even for an underground writer to say
here.
In fact, even the brokers at brokerage firms can be either buy-side or sell-side.
The question is arising again on how to deal with the difficulty of ensuring
that a research analyst stays independent. As a consequence of the bear market
that none of the geniuses running the show counted on coming in the first place,
brokerage firms that have failed to make the distinction clear to the public
are going to be liable, period. This is reportedly going to cost billions of
dollars for those failing the worst in this endeavor.
Yet, it isn't the first time this question has arisen. Brokers have worked
hard on this problem over the years by building a wall between corporate finance
and research.
They found that they couldn't due to the lure of profit there was in pimping
research for corporate business that was nothing short of flattering. Now it's
going to cost.
But the irony is that while they're going through all of this, and figuring
out how to build an even better so called "Chinese wall" (to ensure independence),
which can never really be thicker than a wet tissue, an army of independent
analysts expert in their own fields is growing in a free market environment
permitted by the age of the Internet.
So the Chinese wall may yet again face obsolescence now that information monopolies
have been shattered, on account of the new medium for information that has
allowed individuals to acquire and publish information from virtually anywhere,
cheaply.
In other words, up until now, the investor had few options but to get his
information from the broker. That monopoly has vanished. What's more, the cost
of producing research has fallen. Data services are cheaper and plentiful,
while publishing costs have dropped markedly. I doubt there could be a field
that the revolution in information technology has benefited as much as the
field of analysis. And there is nobody that can benefit more from such gains
in productivity than the average citizen.
Increasingly, research departments at brokerage outfits are going to have
to make a choice, whether to produce for corporate finance, or whether to produce
for clients at the retail level. Their energy could be spent on that decision
rather than on how to build the best wall. Or maybe the brokerage firms will
have to choose between being either one or the other in entirety.
But there is a dilemma. The main problem for the buy-side firms would turn
out to be that without "distribution" in the first place, their corporate clients
would have no use, or less use, for them. Moreover, brokers depend on sell-side
analysts to rebuild their credibility for them when the market takes down their
investment bankers.
Most corporate client's business comes with the expectation that the brokerage
firm where it does its business will put out flattering research reports. I'm
not sure how the brokerage industry can get around that except to say ahead
of time, we're either buy or sell side here. But even there would require regulation
because they are as intertwined in the investment business as the "oldest profession
in the world" is with society.
After thinking about it for a while, it seemed that trying to regulate the
separation could introduce as many problems as trying to regulate the previous
Chinese Wall, if not more. Besides, as we said, the buy-side firms couldn't
exist without distribution (assuming we're going to stay in the age
of boom-bust cycles during our lifetimes).
However, there is still a need for underwriters to exist. Investment banking
and corporate finance are an important part of the market, particularly as
regards the process of financing industry. Somebody has to take the risks these
people do. The stock market's most worthwhile role is probably as a conduit
for risk capital into industry. For the company it is an alternative financing
option and therefore stokes competition in the financial industry. Isn't that
what we want to happen?
Maybe nothing needs to be done at all in terms of more regulation. If the
product of the last bull market is a larger bill to the brokers losing litigation
to clients they have ripped off then justice was already served to a degree.
Nothing hurts quite like getting it in the wallet. From what we saw in the
bull market, many of these brokers deserve it. But if punishments don't work
to deter future indiscretions than I doubt regulaton will. It's easy enough
for people to figure out how to get around regulation, but whether or not they
choose to would depend on the punishment, don't you think?
That said if they have to deal with any extra regulation it is their own darn
fault for raising the ire of the public eye.
But maybe clients too have to become more informed, particularly with regard
to how they might find the right broker, someone they can trust. How many clients
litigating against their brokers now for instance knew full well that if so
and so didn't work out they'd be suing anyway? It's a sure thing thanks to
the abundance of regulation already in place. The public is full of deceptive
individuals and they don't all work at brokerage firms.
The lesson here I think is that brokerage firms are going to have to learn
how to please all of their clients. They will have to realize that the value
of being a middleman lies in pleasing, and bringing together, both sides in
a transaction.
If the Internet and market is left to its own devices, the investor will have
increasing amounts of resources at his or her disposal. Substantially more
than ever. Just like the market goes through booms and busts, the industry
will go through phases and fads where investors clamor for new issues and forgo
independent research despite its availability. On the other hand, there will
probably be times when investors value independent research highly. Human nature
is what it is.
Nonetheless, the more society can foster the growth of such independent research,
the more competitive pressure there will be on the firm's analysts to satisfy
both sides or risk losing retail business to the discount houses.
That's how a market should work. As the independent analyst becomes sought
after by individual investors, he or she will also be sought after by the investment
banking community seeking to raise money. And so the process repeats and repeats.
New up and coming analysts can break through the mold this way, as the old
ones fall to the wayside. For in the end, they will have a choice. Either they
will have integrity or they won't.
Indeed that is where the news is today, isn't it? The failure of brokers to
properly value and balance both sides of their business with integrity is the
foremost problem, but the solution could be as simple as letting the market
better regulate their integrity.
Certainly, to the extent regulators decree that analysts' pay packages shouldn't
have corporate finance incentives built into them, the spotlight ultimately
shifts away from the analyst and directly to the broker or investment banker
who would then be accountable for what his or her analysts recommend.
The criticism deserves to go to the brokerage community, but if we all take
the line that we should protect investors from themselves by building one safety
net on top of another, the protection could cost market liquidity. An example
of over regulation in a particular exchange could be the Vancouver Stock Exchange.
After years of abuse the exchange was perhaps forced to overcompensate, which
led to its demise in the final analysis. Before it did, liquidity gradually
dried up. Power to the market and recourse for investor litigation, but no
more regulation please.
In the end, a market is only as good as its self-governing members' integrity.
Take heed Wall Street.
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