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Wall Street Transparency …
Clear as Mud
May 2010
As America re-regulates its financial system we hear
plenty about conflicts-of-interest, disclosure, and
the regulatory differences between investment advice
deemed “suitable” for clients and, alternatively,
offered in clients’ “very best interests.” At
Hamilton Point we believe the debate should be less
about disclosure and more about aligning incentives,
and think our fee-only business model with the highest
fiduciary responsibility is the standard to which all
investment advisors should be held. However, we doubt
the government will implement needed changes when it
is they that financially back-stop those organizations
that need the most reform and fight changes every step
of the way.
When more is less
We recently walked down memory
lane with our friend, Alex McMillan, who had an illustrious
career as a five-term Congressman from North Carolina’s
Ninth district. Mr. McMillan shared a fascinating eight-page
research report on Lowe’s Companies, Inc. he
had written in 1965 (before entering politics) as an
investment research analyst with R.S. Dickson and Company.
Lowe’s, the venerable home-retailer, as he predicted
forty-five years ago, has been a tremendous long term
investment.
In reading his report it struck us that it was incredibly
well written (no surprise with Alex as author) but
also contained discussion about the quality of management—an
area too often overlooked these days by traditional
Wall Street research departments.
Noticeable as well was the relative dearth of disclosure
at the end of this report from the 1960’s. Specifically—and
in just fifty words of classic “boilerplate”—it
concluded that 1) nothing was guaranteed, 2) the sources
of the data were believed to be accurate and 3) his
firm may broker shares of the company or be long or
short at different times. For curiosity’s sake,
we reviewed a Wall Street firm’s latest research
report on Lowe’s which coincidentally, was eight
pages as well. It included only four pages of analysis
(nothing on management, of course) and four pages of
the disclosure in itty-bitty print. The modern-day
research report had less substance but around 3,500
more words of disclosure at the end— fully seventy
times those in the 1960’s version.
Hide & Seek
If our use of the word “mud” in
the title of this newsletter is too strong, perhaps
translucent is better to describe Wall Street disclosure
since it means that, “light passes through something
without clarity.” The New York Times recently
wrote on this subject and quoted Nobel-Prize winning
economist Herbert Simon who warned, “Information
consumes the attention of its recipients. Hence a wealth
of information creates a poverty of attention.”1
It appears that government regulators of all stripes
believe that the “buyer beware” principle
is sufficient as long as everything known to man is
fully disclosed in the, ahem, fine print (see our disclosure
that follows, courtesy of our regulators).
So what should an investor do if obfuscation is the
weapon of choice among so many financiers? Before offering
our advice, let’s review the two distinct regulatory
bodies governing the investment world currently:
Brokerage Firms Regulated by FINRA
Commission-based
and so-called fee-based brokers that are registered
representatives for firms like Merrill Lynch or Morgan
Stanley Smith Barney are self-regulated by the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority who makes sure that any
security promoted or sold is suitable for the client’s
needs and that all facts about the product (like conflicts,
high fees and penalties) are fully disclosed.
Registered Investment Advisors Regulated by the SEC—Advisors
like Hamilton Point are registered with and regulated
by the Securities and Exchange Commission or state
regulatory agencies who assure that advisors not just
offer a suitable product but first act in a client’s
best interests in what is also known as fulfilling
a “fiduciary” role.
There is a huge difference between the two standards
cited above. Registered Investment Advisors, who are
typically fee-only rather than commission based, have
a compensation structure aligned with clients’ interests,
so attention can be focused on finding what the advisor
believes are the best investment opportunities, given
a client’s profile. In the brokerage world, commissions
and “payout” structures do not always align
broker incentives with client interests. Further, brokerage
firms often have in-house financial products they want
brokers to sell to clients, thus generating more revenue
(and potential conflicts) for the firm. As far as FINRA
is concerned, the broker is acting responsibly as long
as the offered investment program is technically “suitable”—again,
not best but suitable—and conflicts, risks and
expenses are fully “disclosed” somewhere
in the small print.
We recommend that investors get a second opinion from
someone who knows how to calculate all investment expenses
when evaluating their investment manager, and we hope
that Washington focuses on aligning incentives between
clients and their advisors rather than creating new
regulatory regimes or disclosure requirements that
would further overwhelm, rather than inform investors.
When incentives are aligned, lengthy disclosures become
arguably unnecessary because the advisor has already
vowed to act in the client’s interest regardless
of the fine print.
House Arrest
We honestly wonder if some of our
largest competitors could afford to act in the best
interest of their clients. Improved legislation could
save clients money, but would come at the cost of our
nation’s largest brokerages—an impact Washington
dare not impose on some of its capital-starved “affiliated” debtors.
Rest assured, most stockbrokers know of these legislative
headwinds, and many have recently formed or joined
independent companies like Hamilton Point. Sadly though,
many taxpayer supported
brokerages ultimately used their capital to make huge “retention” payments
to brokers, structured as multi-year loans that are
forgiven if the broker does not “jump ship” to
join or start independent outfits during that time.2
How can legislators and regulators defend a system
where many brokers have effectively been bribed to
stay with a certain institution, regardless of whether
they think they could do better for their clients elsewhere—now
or even several years down the road?
Though many brokers (well-intentioned as many may
be) have been handcuffed by the usual Wall Street shenanigans,
and we have no faith in Congress to act, at least clients
do have the opportunity to vote with their feet and
seek out truly independent, fiduciary advisors. At
Hamilton Point, we are proud to offer an escape from
the translucent—at times muddy—world of
Wall Street for a truly transparent world where the
client comes first — always.
Your comments and questions are always welcomed.
Andrew C. Burns
President/Chief Investment Officer
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