Analysts Exist to Make Economists Look Respectable

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By Barry Ritholtz - June 27th, 2011, 7:15AM

“The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectable.”

-John Kenneth Galbraith

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Regular readers know that I do not hold the economics profession in particularly high regard. These sociologists too often have an unfortunate unfamiliarity with how Human Beings behave in the wild. Forget forecasting — economic theories fail to adequately describe what has already happened.

As JKG observed, Economists may give astrology respectability, but there is another group who exists solely to make Economists look respectable: Wall Street Analysts.

As we have discussed about a year ago (McKinsey: Equity Analysts Are Still Too Bullish), most of the time, Wall St analysts are excessively optimistic forecasts, looking for nearly 2X actual earnings growth. The exception is near earnings bottoms, where they are excessively pessimistic.

Today’s WSJ points put that the recent shift in market activity, coming after a 2 year, 100% market rally, has done nothing to dampen their enthusiasm. Analysts ardor for equities is as upbeat as ever. As a whole, the group is looking for S&P500 earnings of $99.86 a share for 2011. That’s up 2.3% from April, and reflects a 16% rise from Q2 2010.

Wall Street Strategists — not exactly a bearish group themselves — expect $95.24 in SPX earnings this year. John Butters, an earnings analyst at FactSet, notes that the gap between earnings estimates of Analysts vs Strategists is 5.6%, the biggest disparity in three years.

Here is the Journal:

“The U.S. economy has slowed noticeably in recent weeks, prompting economists to ratchet down their estimates for growth and investors to drive stocks down 7% since late April. Market strategists started reducing their year-end forecasts for the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index.

But individual stock analysts have remained noticeably upbeat.

As a group, they have not only kept their estimates for corporate earnings for the current quarter intact, but they have raised them.

Skeptics warn that analysts have set the bar too high, increasing the chances companies may disappoint, triggering more market turmoil.

The disconnect between analysts on the one hand and strategists and economists on the other comes largely because analysts are largely focused on their individual companies and industries. That gives them a deeper but narrower view than those who look broadly at macroeconomic factors. As both camps look to the end of 2011, they are seeing very different outcomes.”

Analysts have a latency problem: They mostly produce bottoms up analyses, highly dependent upon quarterly earnings. But by the time changes in broad macro conditions are seen in earnings, it already deep in cyclical turn down. They almost never see the storm coming until it is too late.

My experience with the best of the fundie analysts is that they integrate something beyond quarterly earnings to act as an early warning device. Paul Sagawa, who covered Cisco and Nortel for Sanford Bernstein in the 1990s, was able to forecast a sharp deceleration by surveying carriers spending on telecom equipment. He sidestepped the entire 2000 telecom collapse.

Most analysts do not seem to be able to integrate this sort of additional earnings forecasting capability, to the detriment of their accuracy– and their clients.

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Previously:
McKinsey: Equity Analysts Are Still Too Bullish (June 2 2010)

Why Economists Missed the Crises (January 5th, 2009)

Source:
Stocks Fall. Optimism Stands Tall.
JONATHAN CHENG
WSJ, JUNE 27, 2011
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303627104576409724215192048.html

More previously related posts in comments

Comments

Please use the comments to demonstrate your own ignorance, unfamiliarity with empirical data, ability to repeat discredited memes, and lack of respect for scientific knowledge. Also, be sure to create straw men and argue against things I have neither said nor even implied. Any irrelevancies you can mention will also be appreciated. Lastly, kindly forgo all civility in your discourse . . . you are, after all, anonymous.

8 Responses to “Analysts Exist to Make Economists Look Respectable”

  1. Barry Ritholtz Says:

    To Find the Answers, Look Beyond Economics . . . (May 8th, 2011)

    The Mystery of the Awful Economists (March 2nd, 2005)

    Economics is Easy; Comedy is Hard (June 30th, 2010)

    The Mystery of the Awful Economists
    RealMoney.com, 3/2/2005 3:42 PM EST

    Mystery of the Awful Economists, part II (April 8th, 2005)

    Mystery of the Awful Economists (Part III) (April 13th, 2005)

    The Illusory World of Economic Forecasting (September 19th, 2006)

    RIP Chicago School of Economics: 1976-2008 (December 23rd, 2008)

  2. Outlier Says:

    Confused by how you’ve been calling economists sociologists lately Barry. What do you have against sociologists to make them look so bad?

    Economists SHOULD be sociologists, but they have none of the skills, insight and methodology to actually be worthy of the name.

  3. Jim Greeen Says:

    Behavioral Economics is a field in its infancy along with behavioral finance. B/E’s use social, cognitive and emotional factors in understanding how economic decisions are actually made in the real world versus how they theoretical should be made.

    About the analysts being too bullish, when you sell things being realistic may not be in your best interest.

    As a sociologist once told me, “when selling is the goal, you’ll be more successful telling the people what they want to hear versus the truth“.

  4. miker Says:

    Yves at Naked capitalism has a good bookend to this: http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2011/06/delong-illustrates-why-we-should-be-scared-of-economists.html

  5. carleric Says:

    Anyone who pys any attention to analyst’ is simply too stupid to be in the financial markets. They consistently underestimate earnings in 75-80% of all companies…..gee you think they are trying to sell you something with upside surprises? I consider “beating estimates” the biggest joke on Wall Street and yet dimwitted retail investors fall for it time and time again. Just pathetic.

  6. MRG Research Says:

    As the global and US economy more clearly show deceleration, other unpleasant sideeffects are starting to show up. The latest NFIB survey showed that the small business optimism index returned to a “recessionlevel reading.” The May survey showed the worst hiring prospects in eight months, with more businesses saying they were planning to shrink payrolls than expand them. This is now the first recovery in US history where, seven quarters into recovery, there have been zero gains in aggregate wages and salaries. The latest ECRI report suggests a slowdown of at least two quarters in US growth, and of many months in global growth, although numbers may ebb and flow over the summer.

  7. Monday links: a recipe for failure | Abnormal Returns Says:

    [...] right on earnings?  Analysts or strategists?  (Big Picture, [...]

  8. FT Alphaville » Further reading Says:

    [...] And do analysts exist to make economists look [...]

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