New York—Sometimes it helps to look back as we look
forward, so we read with interest the ruminations of William Donaldson in the
40th anniversary issue of Institutional
Investor magazine. The interview
covers a variety of topics, including Donaldson’s travails at the SEC. As you would expect from one of the pioneers
of modern securities research, Donaldson has much to say about the research
business.
Donaldson Lufkin Jenrette was the prototypical research
boutique. Donaldson’s description of
DLJ’s approach: “We did comprehensive
research that helped institutions identify and invest in lesser-known, smaller
companies at cheaper valuations and improve their performance.” Note the emphasis on ‘lesser-known, smaller
companies’. DLJ was not a small cap shop
per se, but had the freedom to move across market caps. Donaldson is evoking a time before investment
banking captured the research function and harnessed it to its will. A time when Street research was in fact independent.
The interview with Donaldson was conducted before SEC
Chairman Cox called for a ban on soft dollars.
Donaldson predicted greater scrutiny of soft dollars:
“It’s going to be difficult [to get paid]
because I think the SEC is paying more attention to how commissions are used to
pay for research. You are going to see
much more emphasis put on funds, particularly mutual funds, to justify where
those brokerage dollars are going. There
will still be dollars for research, but the firms will have to tell their
shareholders how much they’re spending for execution and how much for
research.”
Donaldson forecasts greater commission disclosure, with
more transparency on how much is being paid for research. Whether that is the outcome—which it may
still be—or whether soft dollars get banned, a tough business is going to get
tougher.
In Donaldson’s view, the difficulties in the research business
are partly self-inflicted:
“The profitability of the research
business was eroding, and that squeezed the firms, but research also squeezed
itself by not being research anymore.
There are still some industry experts doing real value-added work, but
most of what’s out there today is general and worthless, and no one’s willing
to pay for it.”
As commissions spending declines, how much of the
decline is attributable to a decreasing appetite for me-too research? The shuttering of Prudential’s research is a
graphic example of the tough environment for research. Prudential’s research was “independent” but
other than a few quality analysts was largely undifferentiated. It is a warning to all research
professionals.
Donaldson’s view is not all gloom. He holds out hope for research which adds
value for investors:
“I still believe that there’s room for
quality research. There’s not a lot of
room for 20 or 30 analysts saying what’s going to happen next quarter at
big-cap companies. But there is room
for genuine idea generation—research that identifies real changes in business
and companies that investors can make money on.”
The research industry is going through a wrenching
process of transformation. The good news
is that there is innovation and progress in all aspects of the industry. New forms of delivery and new tools for
managing research and tracking good ideas.
New technologies for extracting investment insights from the web or from
large consumer databases. New types of
research giving investors direct access to industry experts or to company
management, or to monitor upstream or downstream developments as a way of
getting early insight into changing fundamentals for a company.
There is a glut in the type of research that DLJ
pioneered, and as Donaldson points out, much of it is mediocre at best. The oversupply will get corrected as the
bundled commissions that DLJ enjoyed disappear either through an outright ban
or through greater disclosure. In the
meantime, like a phoenix, the research industry is reinventing itself. By
Donaldson’s standards, many of the innovations may not seem like research at
all—except that they provide investment insights. This is the key and Donaldson said it well. There will always be a market for idea
generation and investment insight.
Integrity Research Associates, investment research, equity research, research providers, fundamental research, future of research
Posted at 06:43 am by Sanford (Sandy) Bragg
 | Posted by Bill George @ 06/08/2007 08:52 AM PDT |  |
Another interesting point about William Donaldson and Donaldson Lufkin Jenrette (DLJ), not long after launching its well respected, high quality independent research business DLJ became one of the early pioneering third-party broker dealers by launching its Autranet brokerage subsidiary.
In compliance with Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 DLJ’s Autranet subsidiary offered to pay for independently produced research from institutional clients’ commission dollars “paid-up above the fully-negotiated costs of execution”. Autranet would use these “paid-up” commissions to pay the fully-disclosed price of its sister subsidiary’s (DLJ Research division) research and / or Autranet would pay for other research producer’s independently produced research under the “provided-by clause” of the SEC’s interpretation of Section 28(e). Of course, this whole process was fully disclosed, and the uses of these commission payments were very transparent.
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