Stock prices, especially those with high price-earnings ratios, are  usually based on future expectations, which often originate from the  recommendations of security analysts. A security analyst (aka sell-side analyst)  is a person who works for a brokerage, bank, or mutual fund, who  studies specific companies, usually within a sector, publishes financial  reports on those companies, and makes buy-sell-hold recommendations  about the companies’ securities. The recommendations consist of 5  categories:
- strong buy,
- buy, outperform, overweight
- hold, equal weight
- sell, underperform, underweight
- strong sell.
The designations overweight, equal weight, and underweight  are used in regards to portfolio weightings. Hence, a stock with an  overweight rating would be a recommendation to weigh the portfolio more  heavily with the stock, since the analyst expects it to outperform the  market; equal weight would indicate that the stock is expected to  perform as well as the market, while an underweighted stock is  forecasted to underperform the market.
Security analysts also forecast a target price, based on their expectations of future earnings and revenues.
However,  numerous studies and scandals have shown that analysts’ recommendations  are not reliable, and that there has often been a conflict of interest  among analysts and the firms that they work for. Companies were often  rated buys so that the investment banks could win their business. In the  late 1990’s, at the height of the stock market bubble, less than 2% of  the companies were designated with sell recommendations.
For  instance, Jack Grubman, who worked for Saloman Smith Barney of Citigroup  as a top telecommunications analyst, allegedly upgraded his rating of  AT&T, so that Saloman would be selected in managing AT&T’s large  stock sale. He also supported WorldCom, McLeodUSA, Global Crossing, and  Rhythms Netconnections—companies that filed for bankruptcy after the  tech bubble burst in 2000. In fact, according this New York Times article,  Grubman kept his buy rating on WorldCom until a few days before  WorldCom announced its accounting irregularities, forcing it to declare  bankruptcy shortly thereafter.
In 2003, the SEC secured a  settlement from 10 Wall Street firms—including Citigroup, Credit Suisse  Group, and Goldman Sachs—of $1.4 billion for potentially misleading  investors with their biased recommendations, and coerced the firms to  provide independent stock research at a cost of $432.5 million for a  5-year period that ends in May, 2009. The settlement included a  prohibition of investment banking members from reviewing or influencing  research reports made by the banks’ analysts.
William Baker, a  marketing professor at San Diego State University, conducted a study of  analysts’ recommendations for stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average  (DJIA) and the technology sector of the S&P 500, and found that  stocks with buy recommendations performed no better than stocks with  hold or sell recommendations, and that technology stocks with hold or sell recommendations outperformed the S&P 500 Index by 8.3% compared to 4.4% for those with buy recommendations.
Another  part of the study that examined more than 1,000 analysts’  recommendations—issued between January, 1998 and November, 2005—on  stocks in the DJIA found that the recommendations were no more  predictive of stock performance than could be attributed to chance.
Still another study has shown that analysts' recommendations are not very valuable themselves, but that upgrades and downgrades were more indicative of future stock prices.
A  major recommendation to enhance the reliability of analysts’ ratings is  to have their record of recommendations available to investors. The  public availability of their previous recommendations would motivate  analysts to improve their track record to improve their credibility.  Some rules by the self-regulatory authorities do require the listing of  an analyst’s recommendation for companies that they are currently  covering, but companies no longer covered by the analysts can be  excluded.
A major consideration to keep in mind when reviewing  recommendations is that stock analysts are no more able to predict  future market conditions than other market participants. Target prices  are based on the assumption that the current market conditions will  continue. 
 
 
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