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Equity analysts have only one way to get paid

It’s not by separating their fees from trading commissions

July 06, 2023 / 12:48 IST
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Equity
The value of equity research flows to the fund manager while the value of trade execution flows to their client, the model embeds conflicts that have long invited scrutiny.

It was in London, in 1995, when Jim Barksdale, chief executive officer of Netscape, famously remarked that there are only two ways to make money: bundling and unbundling. The internet pioneer’s point might have been focused on software but it resonates across numerous other industries — with the apparent exception of equity research.

Investors at Barksdale’s roadshow at the Savoy Hotel would have returned to office desks overflowing with investment research, dispatched daily from brokerage firms. Such research never came with an explicit price tag – it was simply bundled into the cost of trading. In the US, that’s still broadly the way the market works.

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But since 2018, the European Union has required money managers to pay for trading and research separately under its second Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID II) — an experiment that hasn’t worked.
The rules “might have impaired the overall availability of research,” a European Commission memorandum admitted late last year. Rather than creating the conditions to make money, unbundling turned research into a money loser, and capacity left the industry.

While a waiver was issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission to allow both US and European models to operate concurrently, this week it expired. Netscape (bought by America Online in 1998) is long gone, but European asset managers are left in limbo as to how to procure investment research on US stocks.