Happy reading....

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/price-targets-are-stupid-2012-06-18

By Barry Randall

You've seen and heard them, those simple declarations by analysts
professing to see the future: price targets. Here are a few recent ones:

   -

   Goldman Sachs's price target for IBM IBM
+0.32%<http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/IBM?link=MW_story_quote>
is
   $223: "We reiterate our Buy rating and 12-month target price of $223. Our
   price target continues to be based on a P/E multiple of 15X on our 2012 EPS
   estimate of $15.09. Key risks include macro pressures on key segment
   revenues and lower-than-expected share repurchases and dividend increases."
   (from Goldman's May 20, 2012 'Hardware Download')
   -

   Morgan Stanley's price target on Juniper NetworksJNPR
+0.67%<http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/JNPR?link=MW_story_quote>
is
   $25: "Lowering estimates and PT to $25 from $27 but reiterating OW on the
   lower bar ahead of the seasonal capex turn (from June 13, 2012 analyst
   note)."
   -

   Piper Jaffray, employer of Apple AAPL
+0.28%<http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/AAPL?link=MW_story_quote>
axe
   Gene Munster, thinks Apple is headed to $910, markedly higher than its
   current price in the high $500s: "14x CY14E EPS of $65.14" (from Piper's
   June 11, 2012 note discussing developments from Apple's World Wide
   Developer Conference)

It's not enough to simply think a stock is a buy, sell or hold. Heck no.
The analyst has to pinpoint exactly where (and sometimes even when) a stock
will hit a particular price.

Am I alone in thinking that this is insane?

It's nuts for three reasons. The first reason is that it assumes the
analyst (or pundit or strategist or whoever) cannot only predict the
future, but also predict *how investors will feel about it* . Or put
another way, the analyst is not only taking a crack at predicting a
company's future earnings, but also the multiple that will be put on it.

But this is ridiculous, and examples abound showing why. Did the analysts
covering, say, LinkedIn LNKD
+0.17%<http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/LNKD?link=MW_story_quote>
,
take into account that the sudden post-IPO drop in demand for Facebook FB
+1.60% <http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/FB?link=MW_story_quote>
would
affect demand for LinkedIn, causing the price of LinkedIn shares to tumble
precipitously? Having read a large amount of LinkedIn research, I'm
qualified to tell you the answer: No, they didn't.

In fact, most of the analysts covering LinkedIn contemplated the exact
opposite scenario: that any drop in Facebook's price would happen because
its business model was weaker than LinkedIn's. In a zero-sum game,
Facebook's loss would be LinkedIn's gain. In fact, the relative valuations
(Facebook trading at a forward P/E ratio of 44 vs. 98 for LinkedIn), neatly
demonstrated the analysts' confidence in LinkedIn. Confidence that proved
to be unwise, as Facebook, LinkedIn, Zillow, Zynga and pretty much every
Web 2.0 social media property declined sharply over the last month.

In other words, whatever multiple that analysts were putting on shares of
these companies didn't seem to account for the relationships among them.
Like the fact that mutual funds and ETFs held multiple players in each
class, making redemptions bad for all of them. Oops.

A second reason price targets are crazy is easier to grasp: the problem
with predicting the future in general is... *all the things that will
happen between now and the future.* Sure, analysts can roughly gauge a
company's revenues and expenses, and through them its future earnings. And
if nothing happens between now and the future, great. But lots of things do
happen. Mergers. Product launches by competitors. Executive departures.
Black Swan events - positive ones like the emergence of fracking and tragic
ones like 9/11.

If we lived in a vacuum, all companies would hit their targets. But we
don't.

The third and most important reason price targets are insane is that *the
price of anything (stocks included) is determined by supply and demand* .
Yet neither Street analysts nor the media make any attempt to gauge supply
and demand when throwing out price targets.

How do you know that the stock you want to buy isn't being sold right now
by some new portfolio manager at Fidelity, who's liquidating a seven %
position held by her (fired) predecessor? She can sell at will because her
performance won't start counting until she's got the portfolio where she
wants it.

How can you be sure that stock you just shorted isn't being bought by some
multi-billion-dollar hedge fund's "black box," whose algorithms are
suddenly impressed by the changes in some obscure financial factor? You do
know that more than 70% of all shares traded on equity exchanges in the
U.S. are done so by high frequency traders, right? That means that supply
and demand are essentially controlled by "investors" whose quantitative
tools are not only unfathomable, but change continuously. Good luck with
that.

The bottom line is that whether you're a trader or an investor, the future
price of the stock you're thinking about buying is a mystery wrapped in an
enigma wrapped in a price target. Short term price appreciation (or
depreciation for short sellers) is going to occur for reasons related to
supply and demand, two factors about which you have basically no knowledge.
So be prepared for uncertainty, as you wait for your fundamental or
technical analysis to play out.

Hopefully you get the picture now: never let some overconfident Wall Street
analyst put your smiling face in the middle of a price target.

This commentary does not constitute individualized investment advice. The
opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell
or hold securities.

DISCLOSURE: Barry Randall is long IBM, Z.

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