Online research meetings receive a downgrade

Darren Sinden

Payment for research has been a contentious issue since fund managers were forced to unbundle their costs and breakdown exactly how they spend money, that is ultimately paid for by their underlying clients

The situation faced by almost everyone worldwide this year has changed many facets of modern life, not the least of which is the way that we work within service industries.

Staff within the financial services business sector across the City of London, New York and other finance hubs have spent most of the last 8 months, and in some cases longer, working remotely, meeting online, often with just skeleton teams in the office, if any at all.

Though it could hardly be described as business as usual, work has continued largely without interruptions, thanks to robust communications networks and technology that has allowed us to take the office with us. The use of corporate VPNs, intranets and voice over IP phones has created distributed offices and teams.

The change in the way we work, even within the largest enterprises, has been so profound that it prompted one of the worlds largest CRM and database management companies, Salesforce, to spend almost $28 billion on Slack, a emote workflow integration tool.

Working remotely has not noticeably reduced productivity in most service-based businesses, however, research has started to emerge that shows not all working relationships are as easily transferred to the virtual world.

US-based Substantive Research which tries to match asset managers with appropriate research resources and analysts looked at the way the buy-side values sell-side research in the age of online meetings.

Substantive surveyed 20 Asset management businesses across the UK, Europe and the USA, who manage a total of $4.90 trillion between them.

What they found was surprising and something that, banks, brokerages and research houses will want to take note of.

Whilst the frequency of meetings between analysts and money managers has not been greatly reduced, with physical meetings being replaced by video calls, webinars and screen-sharing.

The value that the buy-side places on these interactions has been sharply reduced, and for one to one meetings this has fallen by -47%, according to the survey data.

Group meetings only fared slightly better with the money managers valuing online group gatherings at 35 less than they did comparable face to face meetings.

That negativity has started to influence thinking around budgets allocated to research among money managers with 40% of the managers surveyed who had agreed on a defined 2020 research budget now reassessing their expenditure.

According to Substantive Research, “Annual research budgets can vary greatly depending on the size of the firm, from $1m – $50m+ for the largest asset managers. Analyst interactions make up 50-70% of research budgets, with one-to-one meetings as the main driver of those payments.”

Payment for research has been a contentious issue since fund managers were forced to unbundle their costs and breakdown exactly how they spend money, that is ultimately paid for by their underlying clients.

As a result of which investment banks and brokers were forced to reassess their research provisions and costings. Those assumptions could now come under renewed scrutiny particularly if trading, M&A and IPO volumes in 2021, don’t match up to those enjoyed in 2020.

Ironically, of course, if banks and brokers trim their research coverage further it may place the onus for research back onto money managers, who will need to build out their own in house research capabilities which of course will raise their operating costs.

Read this next

blockdag

BlockDAG Redefines Crypto Mining as Presale Tops $18.5M, Outshining Ethereum ETF & Dogecoin Dynamics

The recent approval of the first Ethereum ETF in Hong Kong underscores a significant advancement in the cryptocurrency’s mainstream acceptance. While Ethereum continues to attract institutional attention, the Dogecoin price prediction suggests a possible resurgence, despite its current undervaluation from past highs.

Digital Assets

Bitcoin halving is done: ViaBTC mines historic block 840K

The Bitcoin network has confirmed its fourth-ever halving block, mined by the cryptocurrency pool ViaBTC, according to data from Blockchain.com. This significant event in the Bitcoin ecosystem reduced the mining reward by half, a deflationary measure occurring approximately every four years to control the issuance of new bitcoins and curb inflation.

Retail FX

True Forex Funds now offers Match-Trader and cTrader platforms

Proprietary trading firm True Forex Funds today announced the launch of Match-Trader, a multi-asset trading platform developed by California-based FX technology provider Match-Trade Technologies.

Retail FX

CySEC hits FXORO parent with €360,000 fine

The Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) has fined MCA Intelifunds, trading as FXORO, a total of €360,000 for multiple violations of the Cypriot investment laws.  

Digital Assets

Binance’s CZ in good mood ahead of sentencing, says partner

Yi He, co-founder of cryptocurrency giant Binance, has shared a positive outlook on the legal situation of the exchange’s former CEO, Changpeng Zhao. Zhao is currently awaiting a sentencing hearing scheduled for April 30 in the United States.

Fundamental Analysis, Tech and Fundamental

Global FX Market Summary: USD, FED, Middle East Tensions April 17 ,2024

The Federal Reserve walks a delicate line, addressing high inflation through a hawkish stance while avoiding stifling economic growth.

blockdag

‘Kaspa Killer’ BlockDAG Goes To The Moon With $18.5M Presale, Draws Attention from AVAX and Kaspa Investors

Discover how ‘Kaspa Killer’ BlockDAG’s $18.5M presale and 400% surge positions it as the fastest-growing crypto, amidst AVAX’s anticipated market rally and Kaspa’s performance gains.

Tech and Fundamental, Technical Analysis

Bitcoin Technical Analysis Report 19 April, 2024

Bitcoin cryptocurrency can be expected to rise further toward the next resistance level 67000.00, top of the previous minor correction ii.

Digital Assets

Crypto.com denies setback in South Korean market entry

Crypto.com has refuted reports from South Korean media that suggested a regulatory hurdle might delay its expansion in South Korea.

<