What makes your stock price go up and down.docx
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1、What makes your stock price go up and downKEVIN P. COYNE AND JONATHAN W. WITTER The McKinsey Quarterly, 2002 Number 2 CEOs always want to know how the market will react to new strategies and other major decisions. Will a companys shareholders agree with a particular move, or will they fail to unders
2、tand the motives behind it and punish the stock accordingly? And what can management do to improve the outcome?Trying to predict stock price movements is necessary, of course. After all, when stock prices fall, the cost of borrowing and of issuing new equity can rise, and falling stock prices can bo
3、th undercut the confidence of employees and customers and handicap mergers. Unfortunately, however, most of these predictions are no more than rough guesses, because the tools CEOs use to make them are not very accurate. Net present value (NPV) may be useful for estimating the long-term intrinsic va
4、lue of shares, but it is famously unreliable for predicting their price over the next few quarters. Conversations with sample groups of investors and analysts, conducted by the company or by investment bankers, are no more reliable for gauging market reactions.But executives can dramatically improve
5、 the accuracy of their predictions. By adopting a more systematic, rigorous approach, corporate leaders can learn to understand individual investors as thoroughly as many companies now understand each of their top commercial customers. It is possible to know such customers well because there are onl
6、y so many of them. Equally, only a finite number of investors really matter when it comes to predicting stock price movements.Every CEO knows that when buyers are more anxious to buy than sellers are to sell, share prices riseand that they fall when the reverse happens. But fewer CEOs know that not
7、every buyer or seller matters in this equation. Our research on the changing stock prices of more than 50 large US and European listed companies over two years1 makes it clear that a maximum of only 100 current and potential investors significantly influence the share prices of most large companies.
8、 By identifying these critical individual investors and understanding what motivates them, executives can predict how they will react to announcementsand more accurately estimate the direction of stock prices.Armed with these new and solid insights about how critical investors behave in specific sit
9、uations, executives can make strategic decisions in a different light. Knowing what makes crucial investors buy, sell, or hold the companys stock allows CEOs to calculate what its share price might be after an announcement and to factor this calculation into their strategic and operating decisions.
10、To head off short-term selling, a company could manage the timing, pace, or sequencing of strategic announcements. It could introduce a new management team before announcing an acquisition. It could also test an important new product in selected markets before the nationwide rollout. How will invest
11、ors react to a merger announcement and what will the resulting share price mean for a deal? How might a spin-off fare in the market? Does the company need to prepare the market or to consider a carve-out instead?A CEO even has the choice of forging ahead in the face of adverse predictions, using the
12、 information to manage the expectations of the board. An executive may, for instance, consider bold strategies even though they could push some critical investors to sell the companys stock.THE FEW THAT MATTERIt should come as no surprise that big trades can significantly move the needle on a compan
13、ys stock price. When the Bass family of Texas, for example, sold its stake in Disney, in September 2001, in response to a margin call, Disneys stock fell by 8 percent.But typically, short-term changes in a companys stock price arent the result of a single big trade. For the 50 companies whose quarte
14、rly stock price variations we studied, we consistently found that the majority of unique changes in each companys stock price resulted from the net purchases and sales of the stock by a limited number of investors who traded in large quantities. (By unique changes, we mean those occurring relative t
15、o the rest of the market. In other words, they do not include price bumps or falls that coincided with the overall movements of the market or the sector.)Although the number of crucial investors in a company ranged from as few as 30 to (more typically) as many as 100, in each case this set of actors
16、 had a dramatic impact on share prices. In the companies we studied, we could attribute from 60 to 80 percent of all unique changes, quarter by quarter, to the net trading imbalances of these investors.Consider a snapshot of the trading in the shares of a large European industrial company. Exhibit 1
17、 shows the relationship, over a period of two years, between the net buying and selling of its 100 most critical investors, captured weekly, as well as the fluctuation in its stock price relative to the market index.2 In 11 of the 14 cases in which the companys stock price moved significantly, the p
18、rice went up or down in concert with the net buying or selling of these very investors.The two strong outliers in the exhibit were not random events. The point at the bottom right occurred when the company announced the acquisition of a major competitora move that large traders applauded by purchasi
19、ng more of the companys stock but that analysts, small institutions, and retail shareholders rejected. The top left outlier occurred when the government made a crucial regulatory announcement whose impact appeared, on the surface, to be positive, thus attracting a large number of smaller investors,
20、but was actually neutral to negative, something the largest investors understood.3Why should the size of the imbalance between asks and bids matter? At any instant, the market consists of a series of graduated offers to buy (in other words, A has an outstanding offer to buy 1,000 shares at $60, and
21、B offers to buy 2,000 shares at $59.875) as well as a similar set of offers to sell (C offers to sell 1,500 shares at $60.50, and D offers to sell 1,000 shares at $60.75). A sale is made only when one side surrenders across this bid-ask spread (that is, A agrees to buy 1,000 of Cs shares at $60.50).
22、 When buyers collectively want large amounts of a stock, they have to keep surrendering to successive layers of sellers up the offer curve. Sellers who unload large numbers of shares move along the curve in the opposite direction.Of course, the correlation between the buying or selling of large inve
23、stors, on the one hand, and the price of a stock, on the other, can never be perfect. Smaller investors sometimes act in sync and overpower larger holdersas happened twice in two years with the shares of the European industrial company. News, rumors, and world events can spark broad market swings. B
24、ut among the companies we have studied, the correlation is remarkably persistent (Exhibit 2).INDUSTRIAL MARKETING FOR INVESTORSFew companies today get to know their top investors well enough to predict with any accuracy what will make those investors buy or sell more of their shares. The CFO of a la
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