Tag Archive | "Analyst"

BAC, C and GE all Beat Earnings, Revenues are Slowing


This morning, three bellwether blue chip heavyweight companies reported second quarter earnings that left investors mixed pre-market. Bank of America (NYSE:BAC), Citigroup (NYSE:C) and General Electric (NYSE:GE) all surpassed reduced analyst earnings estimates for the second quarter, but with lower top-line revenue figures.

Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) earned $.27 cents per share, compared to the consensus analyst expectation of $.22 cents per share, beating estimates by $.05 per share. However, for the 6 months ended June 30th, total revenue was down over 10%. BAC stated second quarter revenue was $29.2 Billion versus the expected $29.6 Billion by analysts, or a miss of $400 million.

CEO Brian Moynihan said Bank of America’s “credit quality improved even faster than we expected.”

A positive note to keep in mind despite the BAC revenue slowdown is Bank of America was one of the largest recipients of government bailout money, however BAC repaid the entire $45 billion investment issued by the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) in December 2009.

BAC is currently trading at $14.39 per share:

Citigroup (NYSE:C) delivered $.09 cents per share, compared to the consensus analyst expectation of $.05 cents per share, beating estimates by $.04 per share. Revenue for Citigroup was $22.1 Billion, worse than the expected $22.4 Billion, a miss of $300 million.

CEO Vikram Pandit said, “”While the market environment lowered revenues in securities and banking, credit improved for the fourth consecutive quarter.”

C is currently trading at $4.02 per share:

General Electric (NYSE: GE) reported second quarter earnings of $.30 cents per share, beating consensus analyst estimates by $.03 cent per share. Additionally, GE beat revenue expectations by $140 million delivering $37.44 Billion for the second quarter. Although, revenue slowed 4.3% year-over-year — a sign of slowdown for conglomerate.

CEO of Genereal Electric Jeff Immelt said the “higher income and lower losses at GE Capital were particularly encouraging,” adding “GE’s economic environment continues to improve,” He said he plans to “grow earnings and dividends in 2011 and beyond”.

GE is currently trading at $14.71 per share:

Disclosure: Author has no position in the companies mentioned.

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JPMorgan Chase (JPM) Crushes Earnings, Revs In-Line


On May 5th, star banking analyst Meredith Whitney reiterated a bearish view for the banking sector in her interview with Bloomberg. This morning, JPMorgan Chase (JPM) issued Meredith Whitney a reality check and continued domestic U.S. earnings strength.

JPMorgan Chase (JPM) beat consensus analyst earnings estimates by 63%, or $.42 cents per share, with a 2nd quarter earnings report of $1.09 per share. A year ago in the same quarter, JPMorgan Chase reported $.28 cents per share, an improvement of 289% on quarterly earnings.

Revenues in the quarter came in at $25.6 billion, in-line with consensus estimates.

Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, Jamie Dimon, stated, “We continue to aggressively do all that we can reasonably and responsibly to contribute to the economic recovery. During the first half of the year, we loaned or raised capital for our clients of nearly $700 billion, and our small-business originations were up 37%.”

Bank analyst Dick Bove said, “On the whole this [earnings] number is not a good number,” pointing to the $1.09 per share. “It’s here because they’ve taken money out of reserves and put it into earnings.” JPM shares have moved lower since his comments.

JPMorgan’s major competitors include Bank of America (NYSE:BAC), Citigroup (NYSE:C), Barclays (NYSE:BCS) and UBS (NYSE: UBS).

For more detailed information on the JPMorgan Chase earnings release, visit here.

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Medal of Honor: Top Analyst Josh Rosner Nailed the Crisis


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Medal of Honor Josh RosnerJosh Rosner is the inaugural recipient of our first annual Medal of Honor for Excellent Service Award. Like a Navy Seal who does the most elite work yet receives the least public spotlight, Rosner has for years consistently been one of the best analysts on Wall Street. Most importantly, while other false prophets had undeservedly taken credit for nailing the crisis (for the wrong reasons), Rosner and a small handful of other hard working analysts saw and called everything for the right reasons in real-time.

For this reason, Rosner deserves to be treated like a Rock Star. If you had invested money based on Rosner’s calls, you’d surely feel like one. So, while the circus freaks and high-powered public relations people garner all the attention, Wall St. Cheat Sheet is going to bring you the gentlemen who invaded enemy territory in the dark of night and emerged with the Truth.

I had the great honor of sitting down with Josh to discuss his career, the bias of traditional Wall Street analysts, the current state of the financial system, Goldman Sachs et al, the lost spirit of capitalism, and the good guys on Wall Street …

Josh Rosner Quote

Damien Hoffman: Josh, tell me how your career on Wall Street started.

Joshua Rosner

Joshua Rosner

Josh: Totally circumstance. To make a long story very short, I started on Wall Street in the depths of the ’89-’90 recession. I couldn’t find a job except on Wall Street. I came from a legal family. Wall Street was the last industry I ever intended or thought I’d work in. I thought I was going to go into foreign service. I expected to work for or hoped to work in the government — ideally, in foreign service or international affairs.

Damien: So you thought you’d travel the world and now you’re stuck on a 9-mile long island?

Josh: I didn’t want to travel the world as much as I wanted to be a productive part of policy formation.

Damien: How did you stumble upon your first job Wall Street job?

Josh: A friend made a suggestion to talk with her brother who then was at Lehman Brothers. I interviewed there and they hired me as an associate. That was it!

Damien: Since then you’ve worked your way towards becoming an independent analyst. Can you tell us about that journey?

Josh: I was at Lehman for about 3 years. Then I left and went to Oppenheimer — which was bought by CIBC. I was there for almost a decade. The second half of it was focused almost entirely on financial service industry research. I got tired of the quality of research I was watching come out of the sell-side and the increase in conflicts of interest that were becoming more apparent in the dot-com period.

I think all of us are born either growth or value guys. I was born a value guy. So, the dot-com thing never made much sense to me. Some like-minded colleagues, both buy-side and sell-side, and I left to start an independent research firm. We did that until shortly after 9/11 when circumstance changed.

At that point, we offered KBW our research product until they got back on their feet after 9/11. Keefe’s response was, “We really appreciate it, but we can’t source from somewhere else. Why don’t you folks all you come over?” They wanted me to follow New York or New England thrifts and GSEs. I wasn’t very comfortable going back to the traditional sales side. My partners and I had differing views. We still remain very good friends. I simply wanted to keep going down the path of an independent financial research boutique. They did too, but they thought there was an opportunity to do that within Keefe. So, we went different ways.

It became very difficult for me to do it by myself and I was hired away to a firm called Medley Global Advisors. They asked me to run their financial services practice and focus on advising institutional investors on regulatory, legislative, and policy issues.

I was there from the beginning of 2003 through the middle of 2006. Management started heading down a different path than I. So, I continued to do my thing at Graham-Fisher. That brings us to today.

Damien: What exactly has you diverging toward the independent analyst route?

Josh: One is the most obvious potential conflicts of interest between investment banking clients and research — right where perhaps analysts puts a more favorable spin on the securities of companies they’ve got a banking relationship with. Furthermore, the willingness to be pressured by large institutional clients who want you to consider stocks or securities that they’ve got heavy exposure to.

It seems to me that the independence of your view is really paramount. In the largest and most complex financial institutions, the institutions themselves do not offer levels of disclosure and transparency that make them truly analyzable.

Damien: Is it hard to get access because you don’t play the game?

Josh: I have to rely solely on the cold hard facts of their filings and public disclosures coupled with my macro-economic analysis. Wall Street is so soiled it becomes hard for an analyst at a traditional Wall Street firm to actually have an economic outlook. The guy who’s covering the mortgage bankers is not covering the mortgage insurers. The guy who’s covering the mortgage insurers is not covering the GSEs. The guy who’s covering the GSEs is not covering the thrifts. However, changes within a sector occur where all of these sub-sectors meet. So, the traditional sell-side analyst is stuck relying much more heavily on management to give them macro guidance and highlight structural changes in the industry. Consequently, their independence ends up jeopardized.

Damien: Speaking of macro views, we all know one of the prongs for a sustained recovery is fixing the banking system. Can you update us on which inning we’re in and what you think the banks have done well so well so far?

Josh: In terms of fixing the banking system, there’s a couple ways of answering the question. That question also needs to be asked as the banking system distinct from the real economy, and the banking system distinct from the credit markets. There are really three different things related to each other with interplay, but they’re separate.

Damien: I was thinking specifically about the banks because they went through the process of giving out loans to people who couldn’t pay them back and it’s been the heart of the problem. But when you delineate it that way, the credit markets have also been in disarray and need to be healed as well.

Josh: Our large banks have taken some level of government support. They’ve raised some level of capital. I think it has bought them time. I don’t think they fundamentally dealt with a lot of the troubled assets they continue to hold. That’ll have to be dealt with. We still have a significant number of smaller banks that are going to fail. Depending on how you define ‘fail’, we probably have north of 600 and potentially as high as 1100 failed banks. More realistically, I think 600-800 banks are going to fail. But let’s not look at the issue in terms of banks. We should look at it in terms of assets.

Part of the problem is the banks are still by and large undercapitalized to perform the financial intermediation that bankers are expected to perform. In 1989, banks and savings institutions were responsible for providing 65% of consumer revolving credit. Since 2000, they’ve only been responsible for 30-40% of that consumer revolving credit. However, securitized pools as a percentage of total revolving consumer credit were 6% in 1989. Since 2000, they’ve been somewhere close to 50% — declining only since the beginning of the crisis.

Damien: So, there’s been a swap of providing credit?

Josh: Right. Commercial and savings institutions were 54% of total non-revolving consumer debt in 1989, and then only provided 30-34% since 2002. I bring it up because even if we make our banks whole, even if we plug the wholes in their balance sheets, provide them capital or force them to raise capital, create new demand for borrowings, and create a steep yield curve, the reality is we’ve lost the system by which we funded a trillion dollars of collateral in this economy in 2007. And that’s 2007 alone.

What have we done to fix the issue? We haven’t fixed either the banks nor have we fixed the credit markets. Fixing would actually be a fundamental repair — not a patch like we have now. We’ve put up scaffolding to make sure when bricks fall off the buildings they do not hit people below. In our case, the scaffolding has names like Commercial Paper Program, TALF, PPIP, the TGLP, and quantitative easing.

Damien: Is this perpetual scaffolding or is there hope that while the scaffolding is there the building will be remodeled?

Josh: That is the issue. We’re starting to talk about already pulling away the scaffolding, but we really haven’t done anything meaningful in terms of repairing the building. To extend the metaphor, we have not even fully surveyed the building.

Damien: Then are we going to experience some sort of lost decade like Japan if we have all this fixing and surveying left to do?

Josh: I warned about that in July of 2007 in a very important paper. I think that’s a very real risk. I think it’s actually tied to the third piece of this puzzle. We’ve discussed the credit markets and banking system, but we haven’t touched on the real economy. The real economy was a different crisis. Typically, we think of this as ‘the crisis.’  There are actually two different crises: first, the credit market crisis or capital market crisis, which includes ‘too big to fail’ institutions, the blow out of credit spreads, and the problems in the structured securities and derivatives markets; and second, we have the real economy component, which I view as a separate crisis.

This second crisis contextually began in the ’60s when the relationship between real wages and asset prices changed. At that time we saw further distortion in the real economy with an aging population — meaning the baby boomer generation — moving past their peak earning years and the democratization of consumer credit.

We’ve drained quite a lot of equity out of our homes. What used to be the single largest retirement asset for the average American family has actually been in many cases completely gutted at a time when the largest population we have ever had in this country moves toward retirement. There will be a huge impact and burden those people will have on the social safety net — meaning Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security. Those are real economy problems.

Damien: I discussed this with John Mauldin during our interview. What do you say to those people between the ages of 18 and 45? Will they simply work through their peak earning years to pay the debts of the elders?

Josh: That’s part of the reason Obama was elected. People hoped we would have a visionary take us down a new path and address some of these imbalances through technological innovation, educational advances, etc. We certainly haven’t seen that full vision anywhere, but I think that was the hope.

At the end of the day, we have to make significant changes to our continuing education. We need to have real changes in terms of immigration policy. We need to attract a highly skilled workforce in numbers. If we do so, then we’ll replenish the pool and things will be okay. We have an aging population. But it’s not aging as quickly as other places, and there are still a lot of people who would like to be here. That’s one of the positives.

I would suspect that for a while those trillion dollars will get bigger. No matter what we want, the government will become a bigger component for a retiring population. On the flip side, government is going to have to support economic achievements such as retraining and retooling. Government is going to have to support the creation of a post-industrialized economy.

This is not terribly different than the transformation that we’ve seen before in this country. However, a lot of people seem to forget at the end of the 1800s we had a depression — at the end of the 1800s! That was a transformative depression driven by the shift from an agrarian society towards an industrialized society. The excesses of that initial transformation were partially what we felt in the ’20s and the disastrous depression. We are moving toward a post-industrialized economy in which we don’t need the same urban centers or physical infrastructure. Inventory management has had huge advances over the past decade and all of those positive productivity changes are starting to trickle through into the real economy. They create displacement and problems, but we have to absorb those changes. It will take a while.

Damien: Do you think we will have a quicker turnaround now because we have the internet and the ability to start businesses and transfer ideas quickly?

Josh: No, because we’ve got international flows of capital as well which makes it a very difficult challenge for us. We’ve got a population that has among the highest wages in the world, and that puts us at a competitive disadvantage unless we were moving to an isolationist environment. That is not attractive or tenable to anyone at this point.

I think we’re going to go through a period when some of those productivity gains will be passed through as income losses or a loss of some degree of purchasing power.

I would point out that unlike the recovery in the early 1980′s in which we had two unprecedented secular tail-winds supporting our recovery, those same winds are blowing as head-winds. Namely, in the early 1980′s we were still at the very front end of the democratization of consumer revolving credit. Most families purchased based on savings and limited lines of credit — mostly in the form of installment or charge cards. Today, we have over-lent and the opportunities to exploit consumer credit for economic growth is again tied to quaint concepts like wages.

The second difference acting against a quick and sustainable turnaround is the baby boom generation. The largest generation in U.S. history was at the front end of prime earning years in the early 1980′s. Today those same boomers are nearing the end of their earning years. That has real implications.  Just think about the implications for housing and healthcare.

The other risk is that 50% of total employment and 44% of total payroll are tied to companies with less than 500 employees. These businesses are seeing some withdrawal of credit availability, mostly from smaller banks. If that trend accelerates we will see another leg down in employment, another leg up in consumer bankruptcies and defaults, and another risk to asset values in real estate.

Damien: Are we already seeing some of that with wages stagnating for all these years as India and China sucked up a lot of the labor force?

Josh: Yes. There has always been this great notion that globalization will help all ships rise. However, in a closed system that is an unsupportable argument.

Damien: Do you buy the assertion that Americans are going to get frugal and increase savings on a permanent level? Or, is it in our culture blood to inevitably swipe the plastic and inflate our standard of living as soon as things get good again?

Josh: It depends where we are. There will be a necessary increase in frugality. The savings rates are going higher. For many, the lessons we’ve learned are very serious lessons. It took almost three decades for our nation to begin to lose the effect the depression culture and ethos. That said, we didn’t have consumer revolving debt at that point. We didn’t have international trade flows and capital flows. It was a different world.

Do I think we are going to have some increase in consumer savings rates over the longer term? Absolutely. Do I think that our cultural values are shifting back towards traditional American values of frugality? We often forget the whole Protestant ethic and spirit of capitalism included frugality.

Damien: The Calvinists.

Josh: Exactly. Thrift is a real part of capitalism’s spirit, and we’ve forgotten that. I think we’re going to start remembering that. But we’re also going to recognize capitalism in its “purest” form is a non-workable option — but that’s a whole other discussion.

Damien: Moving on to a domestic issue, do you think Goldman Sachs played the three-card monte and passed the taxpayers money to AIG so they could get paid on their default swaps? Or, is that kookie conspiracy theory stuff?

Josh: The most despicable lesson — and I wouldn’t relate it to Goldman as much as I would to 5 or 6 institutions — was in a time of national crisis we had institutions that were unwilling to put aside their lobbying, put aside their will to power, and recognize they had a greater obligation to the country. This is part of why I said capitalism in its purest form doesn’t work because they would assert their primary duty is their fiduciary obligation to their investors. However, I would say part of fulfilling your fiduciary obligation to your investors is to make sure there is a playing field on which to bring your ball and bat every week.

Do I think they tried to maximize their returns in this crisis and minimize the losses they would have to recognize? Absolutely, no question. Is that wrong? I’m not an ethicist, so this is one man’s opinion: Yeah, I think in some sense it is wrong. How do we square that circle? That’s for the government to determine. But I do question whether our Founding Fathers intended for corporations to have the same rights as citizens.

These are some of the same problems I have with the concept of loan modifications on the mortgage side. It’s an issue legislators have to be bold enough to address. If you’re on the government’s dole, should you be able to lobby them? I would say no. If, on the other side, you are a mortgage company that is modifying a mortgage, and you know damn well there’s a 50% or 60% chance the mortgage is going to re-default, are you actually helping the borrower? I would argue, “No.” You’re actually taking two years of incremental cash flow from him or her before he or she re-defaults. That is predatory lending. However, our government is now sanctioning and trying to force that type of predatory lending. Is that appropriate? Well, I would say, “No.” If there is an “acceptable” level of redefault, that social policy decision needs to be decided by legislators rather than the executive branch.

We need Congress, our elected officials, to be grown ups and meet their responsibilities. They need to stand up and say, “That’s a policy issue.” So, the question is, “What is the socially acceptable level of re-defaults?” That hasn’t been defined. So, how could we have an effective modification program if we haven’t even defined what is socially acceptable? The entire root of this crisis boils down to a breakdown of the social contract. So, to get back to your question, was Goldman a part of that breakdown in social contract? Absolutely.

Damien: Do you think it was a pre-meditated strategy that was imposed by some of these financial firms to take on issues and get involved in markets they knew eventually would bring down the whole system?

Josh: Do I think it was pre-meditated? Do I think they understood the risks? Well, if they didn’t, they should be out of business for poor risk measurement and poor risk practices. So in that sense, I do think they understood the risks they had in front of them and chose to ignore them for the longer term. No question. Do I think they pointed the moral hazard gun at our heads intentionally? Yes, a couple did.

Damien: Moving on to a personal issue, what does the future hold for Josh Rosner?

Josh: I love what I do. There’s really nothing I’d rather do at this point. I’d like to believe that in some sense I’m helping the financial and economic literacy of both policy makers and market participants. I’d like to believe that I’m tempering some of the self-promoting or lobbying by market participants. I’d like to hopefully have a greater impact on helping to be a productive part of finally coming around and recognizing the fixes that need to be put in place for the banking system and the credit markets.

Damien: Josh, if your son came to you and said he was inspired to follow in your footsteps, what advice would you give him?

Josh: I would want my son to pursue his own world in his own way. The reason that I did not go into law like my father was I never wanted to find myself at some point in my career wondering whether my achievements were the result of my father’s excellent reputation or help.

However, I can’t say I did it all by myself. Meaning, there are some phenomenal people on Wall Street who take care of other people they think are doing the right things for the right reasons. For example, in my case, I was helped a lot by the two men who used to run Oppenheimer and General Counsel Bob Kleinberg at Oppenheimer. There were some phenomenal people at Oppenheimer. The sense of family, purpose, and social importance was really culturally something I picked up at home — but it was also reinterpreted with the Wall Street meaning for me at Oppenheimer. It was a rare place.

So, I would tell my son to find the good people on Wall Street. Figure out a way to help them help you understand how to do your job in the most ethical and positive way. After 9/11 I really questioned the value of what we do on Wall Street and, after much reflection, accepted that if we do our jobs we will drive capital in the most productive direction for society first and foremost.

On Wall Street there really are two types of people: those who rise solely because they are shrewd, and those who rise because they have earned the respect of their peers. I would encourage my son to figure out a way to be in the latter group.

Damien: That’s great advice! Well, Josh, this has been a very intellectually stimulating conversation for me. Congrats on all your great work and achievements. I hope you can help our policy makers set things straight sooner than later.

Josh: I appreciate that very much. Thank you, Damien.Mini Free Trial Ad

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Medal of Honor: Banking Analyst Chris Whalen is the Best at Breaking Down Banks


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Medal of Honor Chris WhalenOne of Superman’s greatest powers is his x-ray vision. Independent banking analyst Chris Whalen has similar skills when it comes to seeing through banks’ vaults and financial books.

You can hardly find anyone as well respected on Wall Street as Chris Whalen — and Chris has earned that reputation.  In addition to his accurate and incredibly thorough analysis, Whalen follows Groucho Marx’s valuable advice “Before I speak, I have something important to say.”

Therefore, you won’t see or hear Whalen babbling crap or echoing the lemmings as they follow one another over a cliff.

I had the pleasure of catching up with Chris to talk about his adventurous career in finance, the folly of Wall Street’s over-simplified ratings systems, why covering banks is like calculating the location of a particle in physics, and how a Groucho Marx quote guides his rigor.

Sit back, relax, and learn why Chris Whalen is our second Medal of Honor recipient in Wall St. Cheat Sheet history …

Whalen Quote

Chris Whalen

Chris Whalen

Damien Hoffman: Chris, you’ve had a very adventurous career in finance. Tell me about your adventure.

Chris: I was brought up in a different household from most because my father, Richard Whalen, was a journalist.  My mother corrected his spelling.  He worked at Time Inc.  and briefly at the Wall St. Journal with a guy named Robert Novack — who we just lost.  So I had the good fortune of following his career.  That included moving to Washington DC and writing speeches for Richard Nixon.

I grew up in D.C., so my world was national politics and the Fed.  People like Paul Volker, Alan Greenspan, and Arthur Burns would be at our house drinking bourbon, dining, and talking — doing what people did in the 60s and 70s.  So that was my context.

I came out of Villanova in 1981 and worked on Capital Hill.  Then I worked for the Heritage Foundation and Jack Kemp on the Hill — the Republican Conference Committee. That’s where I started to learn how write for two great editors, Karl Pflock and Terri Hauser, who both also were hardcore libertarian conservatives.

Then I got a chance to go up to New York and work at the Federal Reserve in the management training program.  That was my jumping point from DC to Wall St.  After that program I went to work for Bear Stearns as a sales trader.  I had a lot of fun there.

After Bear I worked with my father’s consulting firm, WIRES Ltd., that focused on trade and investments.  We had a lot of big clients in the Far East.  Then I started doing my own thing down under in Mexico because we were working on things related to NAFTA and Free Trade.  Among other things, I published a newsletter called the Mexico Report until ’97.

In ’97 I moved from DC back to New York and did tech-industrial banking at Bear Stearns.  I focused mostly on the financial buyer private equity community, but also got to try to make some big picture ideas work with Alan Schwartz, who is a tremendous banker. He didn’t deserve the way he got treated at the end of the Bear Stearns mess.  I’m very hopeful that he’s going to come back.  He can work as a banker in half a dozen industries and it’s really a talent to have that kind of flexibility.

Skipping ahead a bit, in 2003 I got a phone call from my current partner Dennis Santiago, who I met as a banker at PruVolpe.  He’s a great technologist and has built half a dozen major platforms on Wall Street for analyzing and displaying data.  He had bended my ear about his latest project called Audit Integrity.  I took a look at it – actually worked as a consultant on it for a few months.  It was a good methodology but, unfortunately, you can’t boil down a fundamentals-based analysis because it’s going to be wrong very often.  You’re going to have many false positives that will make the tool ineffective.

For example, when the flag is raised in the system, the question is, “What does the flag mean?”  If you go through that iteration, which is what we go through for things such as our Bank Monitor sample, we are able to then approximate a score — but it’s still a very complex score.  It is not a “yes/no” which is what Wall Street wants.

Damien: There are too many conditional variables to come up with one number in a snapshot and say, “This is it.”

Chris: That’s right.  On the other hand, having the ability to crunch tons of variables in the platform is great.  We get some interesting preliminary results.

I like to look at the context of the numbers, step back and say, “Where is this bank’s business model compared to the other banks?”  Take Hudson City Savings Bank (HCBK) for example.  They are very different than the other banks — even the banks in their peer group and size range.  They’re much less risky in a lot of ways that are very significant.

We said we’d stay positive on this name because they’re going to outperform everyone else. That’s the insight investors and risk managers want from analytics.  You want the analytics to help you get there, but it’s never going to give you a 100% black or white answer.  You have to understand what the numbers mean and the context.  But there is also a judgmental factor you can’t teach to a computer.  It’s moving.  It’s dynamic.  You can’t teach a computer that the last five years were crazy.  You can say, “Yes, these are all anomalies and now we’re going into some more anomalies in the opposite direction.”  But all the machine sees is the numbers and assesses them at face value.

So there is a judgmental part at interpreting all of these pretty analytics to try and finally come down to a judgement that offers something.  We have a range for retail products.  We have our index give a very objective view:  “How did you do this quarter?”  Basically, we look at five discreet factors that are all weighted equally.  Then we get more subjective as we try to synthesize a CAMEL Rating — the framework regulators use for evaluating banks.  We’ve got to decide which ones are important.  The bottom line is you’re going to be much better off so long as you can remember the difference between objectivity and subjectivity in analysis.

What we see a lot of on TV and the news is just a general movement of prices — it’s not evidence of rational behavior.  It is so funny when economists posit rational behavior in the financial market.  I think for 50 years we’ve been moving away from rationality in the markets because we don’t focus on cash flow and the fundamentals of values.  Instead, we look at stuff like, “To who can I sell this asset for more than I paid?”  So, by definition we live in a speculative environment.

When you try to use fundamental analysis, you’ve always got to be aware of that speculative context.  Look at financials.  From March of this year until now we’ve had a 100+ percent rally in financials.  Does that make any sense given the fundamentals?  Absolutely not.  You see this in other sectors as well.  The momentum factor in markets today is fascinating.  It’s much bigger than it’s ever been before.

Damien: Speaking about understanding the difference between types of analysis, does your diverse skill set play a role in keeping you cross-disciplinary in your approach?

Chris: A broader sampling of life’s experience is always a good thing.  For example, I wasn’t a particularly good banker when I went back to Bear Stearns.  I worked on fixed income and was also a bit older than most associates.  But, fortunately, they gave me good tips and I worked on several deals. I also did a few at PruVolpe. That’s how you learn:  the hands-on experience of diligence, talking to people, and researching financials. Those are all skills that take time to develop and to gain the confidence to use properly.

For example, if you’re an analyst, you learn how to tell little white lies if you can’t get access to the information you need.  Some people stretch things too far.  But working as an investigator in banking deals and as a channel researcher gave me forensic skills that I wouldn’t have learned about otherwise.

I’ve done a fair amount of work in consulting and litigation.  So. I’ve developed a niche of specialization with certain types of research, working with the public disclosure system, and tracking data that way.  It helps.

Now, include my partner Dennis.  He is a scientist and systems developer who knows how to query Edgar in amazing ways.  That skill allows us to harvest data kids coming out of school just don’t know how to do.  So there is a value to accumulating knowledge and skills you can’t get in formal settings.

It’s funny how people are skilled with technology when coming out of school, yet unskilled in the basics.  They can use all the tools and program in different languages, but if you sit them in front of a terminal with a command prompt and ask them to build something from scratch, they can’t do it.  Not all of them, but most.

Damien: As an researcher, how do you deal with barriers to disclosure?

Chris: Disclosure presents a lot of challenges outside the US because we are the only country in the world silly enough to believe in disclosure.  Disclosure is not a universal thing.  We can get hold of some data in some countries, but the quality level is iffy and the providence on the data is almost unknown.  So, we end up working with private vendors.  We have a friend in Vietnam of all places who gathers public and private company data throughout Asia.  It’s a private service bureau model.  There is no public mandate for disclosure in any of these countries.

Damien: How do your partners get the data if it isn’t mandated or disclosed?

Chris: Bilaterally with other banks.  If they have business relations with the bank, they will exchange data confidentially.

It doesn’t help the analyst or the investor.  As an analyst we are left with market price data.  It’s all anybody really has. Then we have the US economic data which is a horror show — but everybody pretends it’s biblical text. This is why the data industry has focused on tools driven by market data instead of fundamentals. Issuers have no interest in transparency, but rather selling stocks and bonds.

That’s what you’ve got in most of the world:  anecdotal news reporting. Y ou don’t have the rigger of disclosure you have in the US. Even in Europe.  Think about it:  where do you go for bank data in Europe?  There ain’t no place to go.  I’ve been told there’s a not-so-secret secret — a non-public source for all the regulators.  I’ve got to see if we can get them to give us some disclosure.

Damien: This leads to an interesting point. Your personal website has a very interesting quote from Groucho Marx, “Before I speak I have something important to say.” How do you know when you’ve done enough research to speak?

Chris: That’s a very good question. The first thing I do is assume the posture of the student. So long as you pay tribute to your sources and admit when you don’t know something, you’re all right.

I cringe when people describe me as an expert because it is very hard to be an expert in all of these banks — even the ones I actively cover. You can read everything, listen to all the calls, think deeply about them, and they can still surprise you!

I have to be qualified in my opinions. There’s no “absolute” anything. There isn’t an absolute distribution of possibilities  on which you can run Monte Carlo situations and be confident because your possibilities are variables floating through space. You don’t quite know what they are, but you sort of do.

It’s like a classic physics problem. Where is the particle in space? The answer is I don’t know, but I think I kind of know where it’s going and how fast it’s going there … but I don’t quite know where it is in space right now. We don’t want to get into a trap of generalizing — which we all do because we want to say all companies are like, for example, this one is better than that one. That’s a narrative comparison. That’s dangerous.

Working with Dennis I’ve learned to use statistics very broadly the first time I look at a bank. I compare the bank to all banks because I want to know where it falls into possible ranges of business models. But when you’re a sell-side analyst — or especially investment banking — you tend to group banking peers very closely. In other words, they don’t look at the entire industry. They look only at a few peers and comps. That analysis is prejudiced because they are looking at only part of the industry group. However, if you keep those sources of distinction in mind, you can keep out of trouble.

Damien: Chris, you’ve clearly done better than keep out of trouble with your excellent analysis leading up to and through the financial crisis. We are proud to give you our Medal of Honor for Excellent Service and look forward to your future work.

Chris: Thank you, Damien. I am flattered. I look forward to staying in touch.

Please click her to learn more about Chris and Dennis’s company Institutional Risk Analytics.

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Medal of Honor: Analyst Josh Rosner Nailed the Crisis

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