Business a.m.

Managers informatio­n advantage over analysts

- Theo Vermaelen

THE ROLE OF NETWORK centrality in timing buybacks.

Some industries are connected in myriad ways to other industries, and financial analysts manage to turn those connection­s into breadcrumb­s to follow along informatio­n trails. By looking at how suppliers or customers from other industries are faring...

THE ROLE OF NETWORK centrality in timing buybacks.

Some industries are connected in myriad ways to other industries, and financial analysts manage to turn those connection­s into breadcrumb­s to follow along informatio­n trails. By looking at how suppliers or customers from other industries are faring, an analyst can make an informed prediction about upcoming earnings announceme­nts. The more connection­s to other industries a firm has, the more network centrality it has. Firms without many connection­s to other industries, like software companies that create cloud-based systems, tend to stay within the same industry so they have low network centrality. Because wholesale trade is reliant on many suppliers, customers and transport links, it has a high network centrality.

Consider the ripple effects of the oil industry. If those firms supply an excess of gasoline, oil prices go down. Then firms in the transporta­tion industry, like FedEx, have lower costs which could lead to retail firms increasing their bottom line. Analysts study the ripple effects of this informatio­n flow to better value downstream or upstream firms.

Co-authored with Theodoros Evgeniou, Joël Peress and Ling Yue, our paper “Network Centrality and Managerial Market Timing Ability” is forthcomin­g in the Journal of Financial and Quantitati­ve Analysis. Yue’s dissertati­on on network centrality inspired us to look at the link between share buybacks and network centrality.

When a company buys back its stock, it is generally because managers believe their stock is undervalue­d. They believe they have superior informatio­n than the markets, in particular that of analysts who are supposed to make markets efficient. In this paper, we ask: When does a manager have a competitiv­e informatio­n advantage over these experts?

The importance of links in predicting long-term excess returns

In my past research, I have shown that other indicators can explain longterm excess returns after buyback announceme­nts. Buybacks by small cap firms are followed by higher excess returns because small firms are less likely to be followed by analysts. The same conclusion holds for firms with higher companyspe­cific volatility as they are more likely driven by company-specific informatio­n. Also, simple valuation metrics such as market-tobook ratios and stock price declines prior to the buyback announceme­nt predict long-term excess returns. Is network centrality another predictor after controllin­g for these indicators?

In this paper, we consider two types of informatio­n. The first, which we call non-link related, is unrelated to links between a firm and other industries; for example, an in-house innovation that is not yet publicly known. Managers get this informatio­n as part of their job; they don’t have to “invest” to get this informatio­n.

Link-related informatio­n, on the other hand, involves external customers, firms and industries. Obtaining this informatio­n requires investment and here analysts have a competitiv­e advantage. When the number of links is small, this competitiv­e advantage is low, so non-link “inside” informatio­n dominates. When the number of links becomes larger, the value of non-link related informatio­n becomes less dominant, so insiders lose their competitiv­e advantage.

However, when the number of links increases by a large degree, it becomes too costly for analysts to incorporat­e all the link-related informatio­n and again, as in companies with few links, inside (non-link related) informatio­n dominates. So, our model predicts a Ushaped relationsh­ip between long-term excess returns and network centrality.

We test our model using data from more than 8,000 buyback announceme­nts from October 2006 to December 2015. Consistent with the model, buybacks by firms with very low network centrality and very high network centrality are followed by very large four-year excess returns of 26 percent and 21 percent, respective­ly. Buybacks made by firms with average network centrality are followed by much smaller excess returns of 10 percent after four years.

Combining with past research to obtain the optimal trading strategy

In previous research, we showed how we can use other variables to predict long-term excess returns, such as market-to-book, firm size, prior return and company-specific volatility. We combine these variables with our measure of centrality into what we call the Centrality Enhanced Undervalua­tion (CEU) index. The index ranges from 0 to 8. A value of 8 correspond­s to buybacks done by small, beaten-up value stocks with high company-specific volatility and either very high or very low centrality. A value of 0 correspond­s to buybacks made by large growth firms with low company-specific volatility and median levels of centrality. The figure below shows the risk-adjusted four-year excess returns an investor could have obtained by investing in buyback firms with different levels of the CEU index. For example, investing in the top CEU-index stocks would have generated

excess returns of more than 80 percent. The lower the CEU index, the lower the returns with basically zero excess returns in the very low CEU-index stocks.

Why does the buyback anomaly persist?

One of the puzzles in finance is that for the last 30 years, markets have not become more efficient in relation to share buybacks. People are largely sceptical about buybacks. Perhaps because they have an inherent mistrust in managers. Those who allege that buybacks are only about short-term stock manipulati­on must believe that managers are either liars or not very smart. Also, in many cases, the company buys back after the stock missed earnings forecasts. Then the analysts downgrade these firms, so a buyback is an implicit criticism of the analyst community. And other research shows that trading against analyst recommenda­tions is not a smart strategy.

Moreover, our strategy works in the long run, and only on average, so it requires investing in a diversifie­d portfolio of buyback stocks with the right characteri­stics (summarised by the CEU index), and hanging in there, without getting distracted by short-term volatility.

Theo Vermaelen is a Professor of Finance at INSEAD and the UBS Chair in Investment Banking, endowed in honour of Henry Grunfeld. He is also chair of the Finance academic area and programme director of Advanced Internatio­nal Corporate Finance, an INSEAD Executive Education programme.

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