At The Motley Fool, we poke plenty of fun at Wall Street
analysts and their endless cycle of upgrades, downgrades, and
"initiating coverage at neutral." So you might think we'd be
the last people to give virtual ink to such "news." And we
would be -- if that were all we were doing.
But in "This Just In," we don't simply tell you what the
analysts said. We'll also show you whether they know what
they're talking about. To help, we've enlisted
Motley Fool CAPS, our tool for rating stocks and analysts
alike. With CAPS, we track the long-term performance of Wall
Street's best and brightest -- and its worst and sorriest,
too.
And speaking of the best ...
Stock market investors rejoiced as markets turned green
again yesterday, and
Halliburton (NYSE: HAL) owners were even
happier than most. For this, they can thank
Wells Fargo, which yesterday declared Halliburton "the
most attractive risk-reward of the Big 4" oil servicers, and
initiated coverage on the company with an "outperform"
rating. Buoyed by the megabanker's encouraging words, Hal's
stock went on a 4% tear.
But should it have?
Let's go to the tape
The question is a bit more complicated than it ought to
be today, but let me walk you through it. Once upon a time,
there was a bank named Wachovia. It made some "poor
choices," however -- as my mother might put it -- and wound
up getting 'et by a bigger, smarter bank by the name of Wells
Fargo.
But Wells wasn't just smarter than Wachovia. It was also
more reticent about reporting its stock guesses to
Briefing.com. Hence, it hasn't amassed much of a paper trail
on CAPS yet. Worse, what record it
doeshave on
Oil, Gas and Consumable Fuels(OGC) stocks is less than
impressive. Several months of picks in the sector have left
Wells Fargo with an anemic record of
30%
accuracyin the oil field, based on a very small sample
size.
To get a better picture of the analytical team that now
inhabits Wells, though, I traveled back in time (did I
mention that CAPS has a time machine?) to examine how "
Wachovia" used to fare in the oil patch. The news was
both bad and good. Good, in that Wachovia scored a
respectable 55% for accuracy in OGC stocks ...
"Wachovia" Says
CAPS Says
"Wachovia's" Picks Beating (Lagging)
S&P by
Chesapeake Energy (NYSE: CHK)
Outperform
*****
(14 points) (two picks)
Williams Companies (NYSE: WMB)
Outperform
****
(1 point)
XTO Energy (NYSE: XTO)
Outperform
*****
56 points
... and bad in that Halliburton is not technically an OGC
stock -- it's a servicer of such stocks. And when you drill
down to Wachovia's record in
thissector, termed
Energy Equipment and Services, it appears that Wachovia
historically has about a 46% accuracy in this sector:
"Wachovia" Said
CAPS Says
"Wachovia's" Picks Beat (Lagged) S&P
by
Weatherford Int'l (NYSE: WFT) Continued... |