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Gargiulo + Partners believes clearer communication is necessary for all investors, regardless of their level of sophistication.
Basic prudence in structuring complex information not only makes it easier to decipher public and private disclosure documents;
it can also improve a firm's reputation for fair and transparent dealings.
Certainly, there are limits to how simple the communications for any financial instrument can be; securities laws mandate
extensive disclosure. But firms can greatly improve this disclosure through simple, straightforward communications techniques:
top-lining information, providing context, explaining relevance, and using plain language.
For example, consider the executive summary, a feature common to prospectuses, financial analyses, regulatory filings, and
private placement memoranda for decades. What started as a helpful attempt to highlight key elements for decision-makers has
morphed into its own distinct section, with a murky mission. It doesn't always summarize the rest of the document, it often
contains data not found elsewhere, and it leaves out other material details. In 1998, a Securities and Exchange Commission report
lamented, "Many summaries now seem as long as the [disclosure] document itself." To make executive summaries the helpful tool
they were intended to be, firms must be diligent in summarizing their offerings, previewing the conclusions of each section, and
selecting the right highlights.
The basic structure of a document – starting with the table of contents – can also go a long way toward improving clarity.
Message titles, rather than generic topics, guide investors toward key findings before they've dug into the text. Rather than
a title such as "Impact of Funds' Capital Structures and Leverage Strategies on Performance," a shorter yet more direct heading
like, "Use of Leverage Increased Returns by 2%" provides useful, meaningful context. Starting each section with the conclusion
or highlight, then building the case for it, increases the likelihood that investors will read on and thereby better understand
crucial details.
A significant proportion of the losses sustained during the financial crisis can be attributed to market participants, of all
kinds, being either unwilling to consider or unable to comprehend their investments. Human nature being what it is, it's good
practice to make sure financial communications don't just disclose information but also provide conclusions that enlighten readers.
Such efforts may help Wall Street win back investor confidence, no matter how regulatory reform ultimately takes shape.
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