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Robot analysts are better than humans at picking stocks, a new study found

Feb 11, 2020, 22:30 IST
Fabrizio Bensch/ Reuters
  • Robo-analysts seem to make better stock recommendations than human research analysts, according to a University of Indiana study.
  • The study examined 76,568 reports issued by seven robo-analyst companies between 2003 and 2018.
  • It found that portfolios based on the buy recommendations of robo-analysts outperformed those of human analysts, suggesting robo-analysts' buy recommendations are more profitable.
  • It's not clear that investors act on robo-analysts' recommendations, however.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

In the long run, robo-analysts appear to make more profitable stock recommendations than human research analysts, according to a study from the University of Indiana.

The study's researchers examined 76,568 reports issued by seven robo-analyst companies between 2003 and 2018, and published their preliminary findings back in January.

They found that portfolios based on the buy recommendations of robo-analysts outperformed those of human analysts, suggesting robo-analysts' buy recommendations are more profitable.

What's more, they found that robo-analysts collectively produce a more balanced distribution of buy, hold, and sell recommendations than do human analysts, and are less likely to rely on companies' periodic earnings reports when carrying out their analysis.

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In contrast to human analysts, robo-analysts typically work by poring over the reams of data released in firms' annual reports.

Robo-analysts should also be distinguished from their close relatives, robo-advisers.

Though the two are similar, robo-analysts typically deep-dive into SEC filings to analyze companies' finances, while robo-advisers tend to perform more coarse-grained tasks like determining and communicating asset allocation strategies based on questionnaires they carry out with investors.

Financial analysts worried about losing their jobs should resist alarmism, though.

For one thing, robo-analysts don't appear to outperform human analysts when it comes to the other side of the equation: sell recommendations. The Indiana study found "no evidence" to indicate that robo-analysts' sell recommendations are incrementally more profitable than those of human analysts.

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More pertinently, it's debatable how seriously investors take recommendations made by robots - even if, as the Indiana study suggests, they shouldn't be dismissed out of hand.

To its credit, the study also examined how far investors actually respond to robo-analysts - and found that investors do not appear to incorporate and trade on the signals provided by their recommendation revisions.

What's more, it's still far from clear that robo-advisers - robo-analysts' cousins - will become a dominant force on Wall Street.

While the typically more old-school Goldman Sachs is set to launch a robo-advisory service this year, asset management giant Investec closed its own robo-advisory service in 2019 after operating losses reached £26 million ($33 million).

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