Date: 11/17/2016
Event start time: 8:30 AM
Event end time: 5:00 PM
Category: Seminar
Price: Member Fee: $1,149; Non-Member Fee: $1,349
Register

  Printable Registration Form (PDF)


Learn to look through the eyes of one of your key target audiences. Find out how analysts think, how they build their models, and what pushes their buttons. This course will put you in the shoes of an analyst so that you can see things from their perspective. Exercises include a team forecasting competition, interpreting how guidance affects an analyst’s model and identifying the key assumptions in consensus.

WHO SHOULD ATTEND
This course is designed for anyone who deals with the sell-side as part of the company’s financial communications. We will assume that you have taken Finance Essentials or have the equivalent knowledge.  Participants tend to come from a mixture of financial and non-financial backgrounds and this course provides something for everyone.

OUTCOMES
  • Understand the role of the sell-side, primary tasks, sources of information and perspectives
  • Appreciate the how analysts do their job – from identifying the value drivers, through to forecasting and model building, valuing the business, and making a recommendation
  • Be able to translate this knowledge into lessons for IR on how best to communicate with and influence analysts on both the sell-side and the buy-side

WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
  • The Big Picture
  • Setting the scene – understanding your investor base
  • The role of analysts in today’s capital markets
  • Sell-side and buy-side – similarities and differences
  • Primary tasks of an equity research analyst
  • Analyst perspectives, pressures, and typical characteristics
  • How analysts make money
  • Sources of information and how it is organized
  • How you can help

Identifying Value Drivers
  • Understanding industry structures and peer group identification
  • Analyzing capacity and demand – the importance of historical analysis
  • Identifying the food chain – suppliers and customers
  • Critical factors that impact earnings, cash flows and/or returns
  • Key questions you need to be able to answer on strategy

Forecasting and Model Building
  • Typical models
  • How analysts forecast and the role of guidance
  • Special factors for cyclical or growth companies
  • Red flags
  • Sensitivity analysis
  • Understanding the key assumptions in consensus
  • Key questions you need to be able to answer on the financials
  • Understanding price targets and recommendations

Lessons for Communications with Analysts
  • Key influencing skills – understanding what’s in it for them and what are their concerns
  • The role of non-verbal communications (including body language)
  • Implications of Reg FD
  • Tactics to encourage a following
  • Top tips for IR and for senior management

PREREQUISITES
Finance Essentials or having the equivalent knowledge.
 


Finance Seminars in New York (November 2016)



Speaker(s):

David Yates

David Yates

Partner, FinanceTalking, Ltd.

David joined FinanceTalking in 2009 after nearly thirty years in the City as a corporate lawyer, investment banker and financial PR specialist.

  • Qualified as a solicitor in 1982.  Joined Linklaters & Paines, specializing in capital markets and corporate law
  • Joined the corporate finance division of Robert Fleming, London based merchant bank, in 1984.  Spent three years on secondment with Jardine Fleming in Australia between 1987 and 1990.
  • Began his Financial PR career in 1995 with Gavin Anderson & Co.
  • Joined Financial Dynamics (FD) as a partner at the end of 1998 and commenced their coverage of the Life Sciences sector.
  • Retired from FD in March 2009 following sale of the company to FTI Technologies Inc. of the US.

During his financial PR career in the City, David built a reputation as one of the leading practitioners in London and acquired experience in all aspects of the financial markets, particularly M&A and IPOs.  Together with his experience in the law and the investment banking sector, he has an in-depth knowledge of the workings of the City, the roles that each of the institutions play in the markets and how business is covered by the media.