Investment banks often have conflicting roles. They sometimes act for a client company by raising capital form other investment institutions as advantageously as possible, but their analysts also sometimes send unfavorable reports on the financial health of companies for whom they are raising capaital to other clients who wish to make investments. Analyses of companies' financial health need to be unbiased if an investment bank is to achieve long-term success.
If the statements above are true, which of the following practices, if adopted by an investment bank, would hinder its long-term success?
A) Evaluating and rewarding the bank's analysts on the basis of recommendations made by managers who are solely engaged in raising capital for clients.
B) Using reports by the investment bank's anaylsts to determine how best to raise capital for a client.
C) Sharing the task of raising capital for a client with other investment banks.
D) Ensuring that conflicts between analysts and those who raise capital for clients are carefully mediated and resolved by impartial arbitrators.
E) Monitering the success or failure of analysts' current predictions about how companies will perform financially, in order to determine the value of future predictions. |