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When
calculating the consensus, date-weighting is used to
give more emphasis to recent forecasts.
Brokers' recommendations are indicated with abbreviations
like LTB for long-term buy and TPR for take profits.
A full list of these abbreviations
can be found here.
There is no consensus for recommendations as they are
all made on different dates and at different ruling
share prices.
Sometimes brokers' forecasts are excluded from the consensus
for reasons like profit warnings (indicated by 'w'),
age ('a'), structural changes in progress ('s') and
the temporary disqualification of the broker who might
be acting for the company on an acquisition or rights
issue ('b'). If a results
announcement has rendered a forecast obsolete it is
flagged 'r'. Other anomalies are flagged 'd' for 'different
basis'.
Just below the consensus forecast there are two lines
showing the one-month change and the three-month change
compared with earlier consensus forecasts.
In essence, REFS' aim is to provide a consensus which
is date-weighted after excluding old forecasts and 'outlying
forecasts' (ie those with a large deviation from the
norm).
Anumber
of points deserve special mention when studying details
of brokers' consensus forecasts:-
-
The reliability of the consensus forecast (and therefore
of the PEG) is considerably enhanced if there is a
large number of brokers (say five or more) covering
the company, and a small standard deviation from the
average forecast. Watch out for the lemming effect,
however. If a prestigious and top-notch broker makes
a forecast for a company in an industry in which he
is known to specialise, it is very tempting
for an analyst working for a lesser firm to take a
lead from the much more detailed research.
- With
many smaller companies (especially AIM stocks) there
is often only one broker's forecast. Placing undue
reliance on this clearly adds to the risk. A very
keen eye should be kept on directors' dealings and
the relative strength of these shares.
- The
company's own broker or brokers are highlighted in
a panel above the Outlook statement. I pay special
attention to the company broker's forecasts especially
if the brokers in question are prestigious. The company
broker should be better informed and is less likely
to take the risk of embarrassing the company with
over-optimistic
forecasts.
- The
recency of brokers' forecasts is obviously of critical
importance. I usually compare the last few forecasts
with the consensus to see if there is a major discrepancy.
Date-weighting will, of course, have taken this into
effect in a more calculated way.
- A
keen eye should be kept on the one-month overall change,
the three-month overall change and the number of pluses
or minuses, as they all indicate if newsflow is becoming
more positive, remaining neutral or beginning to turn
negative.
-
An important caveat about the EPS figures is that
the tax rate sometimes varies substantially. When
a company is recovering from a loss-making position,
after a year or so any tax losses brought forward
are likely to be exhausted. At this point, the company
begins to pay a full tax charge again and EPS are
reduced accordingly. Even though profits before tax
might be increasing by, say, 20% in the year ahead,
this could be masked by the increased tax charge.
It therefore pays to keep an eye on pre-tax profits
figures as well as EPS and to double-check the historic
and forecast tax rates, which are shown in the panel
of seven-year figures.
There
is always the risk that the brokers' consensus forecast
will not be met. However, it would be impossible to calculate
twelve month rolling ahead figures without a consensus
forecast and it is preferable to invest with a little
guidance from brokers rather than none at all. Provided
a keen eye is always kept on newsflow, relative strength
and directors' dealings, the risk of a major upset should
be minimised. Bear in mind too that there is another more
positive side to the coin - brokers' forecasts are frequently
beaten by a wide margin.
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