Part two is understanding the advice. A large part of the problem is that many aspects of the advice are unsaid. For example, with a “buy” recommendation:
The likelihood of success is subjective, but still important. It helps if analysts/touts would clarify how certain they are of success, st least in vague terms.
Listing the risk factors is important. Analysts do less of this than do companies in their prospectuses/10Ks. These are important, and it would be valuable for analysts to see if there are any risk factors not listed, or emphasize the importance of key risk factors.
Knowing how frequently the advice will be updated aids the investors — it helps them understand how much help they will get, or whether after the recommendation, they are on their own.
It helps to know whether the adviser has any real talent or not. Does he just opine, or is his own money on the line? Has he succeeded in the past?
Finally, the benchmark is of utmost importance. Buy! Why, what will it do better than? Is it a relatively good stock? Is it a relatively good stock in its industry? Is it a relatively good bond? Is it just going to do better than cash? Y0u need to understand the comparison that the analyst is making in order to say the stock is a buy.
More in Part III
- What time horizon does this recommendation require?
- How likely is it that this investment will succeed?
- What risk factors could cause the investment to fail?
- How will this advice get updated?
- Have prior investors benefited from this advice?
- What is the benchmark for the advice?
The likelihood of success is subjective, but still important. It helps if analysts/touts would clarify how certain they are of success, st least in vague terms.
Listing the risk factors is important. Analysts do less of this than do companies in their prospectuses/10Ks. These are important, and it would be valuable for analysts to see if there are any risk factors not listed, or emphasize the importance of key risk factors.
Knowing how frequently the advice will be updated aids the investors — it helps them understand how much help they will get, or whether after the recommendation, they are on their own.
It helps to know whether the adviser has any real talent or not. Does he just opine, or is his own money on the line? Has he succeeded in the past?
Finally, the benchmark is of utmost importance. Buy! Why, what will it do better than? Is it a relatively good stock? Is it a relatively good stock in its industry? Is it a relatively good bond? Is it just going to do better than cash? Y0u need to understand the comparison that the analyst is making in order to say the stock is a buy.
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More in Part III
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