Research Renegades
Fed up with conflicts at big banks, equity analysts are striking
out on their own and winning over jaded investors. Not all of
the fledgling firms will make it.
By Edward Robinson
Bloomberg Markets, November 2009
When Credit Suisse Group analyst Ivy Zelman refused to turn
bullish on homebuilding stocks during a rally in the fourth
quarter of 2006, the blowback was intense.
She says investors told her that some housing industry
executives were ridiculing her analysis as a “jihad,” and
several of the bank’s sales representatives pressed her to
upgrade “hold” ratings to “buys” on companies to appease
bullish institutional-investor clients. One sales manager even
sent her an e-mail warning that analysts who stayed bearish too
long often lost their jobs.
Zelman was furious. She’d spent 16 years dissecting the
home construction business and wasn’t about to ditch her
analysis and join the bulls’ party. On Dec. 7, 2006, she slapped
a “sell” call on the entire group, and during the next 12
months, the Standard & Poor’s Supercomposite Homebuilding Index
plunged 53 percent as the real estate market collapsed.
Stefano Natella, Credit Suisse’s global head of equity
research, says that while debate between the sales team and
research staff over their calls is normal and healthy, the e-
mail from the manager crossed the line and he was reprimanded.
Even though Zelman had Natella’s support, she grew fed up with a
culture that prized irrational exuberance over sober analysis.
“It was no fun being the bear,” Zelman, 43, says. “I’d
come home from work and just be so upset. So I started thinking,
‘If I believe in my work, why not do it on my own?’”
Going Solo
In May 2007, she resigned from Credit Suisse. After
weighing whether to start a hedge fund, a buyout boutique or a
research firm, she settled on the latter and opened Zelman &
Associates, in Cleveland and New York, five months later.
Zelman is one of a rising number of equity analysts who’ve
quit large banks and gone solo. They’re joining a wave of
investment bankers and traders who’ve moved off Wall Street to
set up mergers and acquisitions advisory firms and work at mid-
size brokerages as the financial world reconstitutes after the
credit crackup.
Independent research firms are popping up in New York,
Silicon Valley and London, where Stuart Graham, the former head
of Merrill Lynch & Co.’s European banking stocks team, unveiled
Autonomous Research LLP in July with the motto “Free from
external control and constraint.” The number of independent
research firms in the U.S. has soared to 2,667 from 1,012 in
2006, according to Integrity Research Associates LLC., a New
York-based consulting firm.
Outflanking Wall Street
Zelman and her fellow independents are taking aim at Wall
Street banks by selling research to institutional investors,
ranging from PNC Capital Advisors Inc., an investment firm in
Philadelphia, to hedge fund firms such as Passport Capital LLC
in San Francisco and Vardon Capital Management LLC in New York.
Independent shops will have a hard time outflanking
resurgent securities firms, which possess huge advantages. Their
underwriting and allocation of equity offerings motivates money
managers to preserve their relationships with brokerages, says
Jay Bennett, a consultant with Greenwich Associates, a Stamford,
Connecticut-based firm that advises institutional investors.
Today, Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and
other giant securities firms receive almost 70 percent of the
commissions institutional investors dole out for research. That
compares with 3 percent for independents and the rest for mid-
size firms, according to Greenwich.
“There is a symbiotic relationship between the bulge-
bracket bank and the typical institutional investor, and I can’t
see that being displaced,” Bennett says.
Analysts Marginalized
In 2002, then-New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer and
the Securities and Exchange Commission began investigating the
research industry in the midst of conflict of interest scandals
that erupted after the dot-com bubble imploded in 2000. Rock
star analysts like Jack Grubman, the telecom specialist at
Citigroup Inc. who earned $67 million from 1999 to 2002, and
Henry Blodget, Merrill Lynch’s dot-com guru, had issued glowing
recommendations of companies to win investment banking business,
according to lawsuits filed by the SEC.
In 2003, the SEC prohibited the analysts for life from
associating with a broker-dealer or investment adviser. Grubman
and Blodget didn’t admit or deny wrongdoing in their
settlements.
In 2003, Spitzer and the SEC struck a settlement with
Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Merrill and eight other major banks
that permanently barred them from using investment banking
revenue to compensate research staffs and fund their work.
Analysts became marginalized on Wall Street, losing thousands of
jobs and their seven-figure salaries: Annual pay for top
performers fell to about $600,000 by 2008 from a peak of $2.5
million in 2000, says Alan Johnson, president of Johnson
Associates Inc., a New York-based compensation consultant.
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