Home › Forums › Housing › Analyst asks Toll “I am wondering which Kool-Aid you’re drinking?” – resigns
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davelj.
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June 15, 2007 at 7:08 AM #9308June 15, 2007 at 8:56 AM #59554
Ash Housewares
ParticipantI was able to tease out a bit more info:
Ms. [Ivy Zelman], 41 years old, says she has turned down several opportunities because her position as an equity analyst wouldn’t allow her to pursue them. A private-equity fund asked her to be an adviser and equity investor in a land fund and a private home builder asked her to sit on its board, she says. “As the down market continues, more people are asking for my advice,” she adds. “I want to capitalize on what I’ve built.”
June 15, 2007 at 8:56 AM #59585Ash Housewares
ParticipantI was able to tease out a bit more info:
Ms. [Ivy Zelman], 41 years old, says she has turned down several opportunities because her position as an equity analyst wouldn’t allow her to pursue them. A private-equity fund asked her to be an adviser and equity investor in a land fund and a private home builder asked her to sit on its board, she says. “As the down market continues, more people are asking for my advice,” she adds. “I want to capitalize on what I’ve built.”
June 16, 2007 at 4:35 PM #59875bob007
ParticipantIvy Zelman, a blunt-speaking bearish analyst with a knack for spotting signs of trouble in the housing market, is resigning from her position at Credit Suisse Group.
Ms. Zelman, who has worked at the financial-services company for nearly 10 years, says she is leaving to pursue more “entrepreneurial” and lucrative opportunities in the housing sector, though she has no formal offer at the moment.
Known for her probing questions to home-builder executives during earnings conference calls, Ms. Zelman focused on issues such as a flood of speculators in the new-home market, an oversupply of land and problems posed by subprime mortgages. She challenged bullish home builders and analysts, who believed home sales would keep roaring despite signs of speculative excess. After relatively upbeat statements by Toll Brothers Inc. chief executive Robert Toll during a conference call last December, she asked, “I am wondering which Kool-Aid you’re drinking?”
She was ranked the top home-builder analyst in The Wall Street Journal’s 2006 “Best on the Street” analyst survey. Before Credit Suisse, she worked at Salomon Brothers (now part of Citigroup Inc.) first in investment banking and later as equity analyst, focusing on housing.
Credit Suisse said Ms. Zelman is leaving on good terms. The firm declined to say how much she was paid. “Ivy personifies great propriety research, intense conviction and unmatched competitive spirit. She helped develop some of the strongest people we have in the department,” said Lara Warner, managing director and director of U.S. equity research at Credit Suisse.
June 16, 2007 at 4:35 PM #59908bob007
ParticipantIvy Zelman, a blunt-speaking bearish analyst with a knack for spotting signs of trouble in the housing market, is resigning from her position at Credit Suisse Group.
Ms. Zelman, who has worked at the financial-services company for nearly 10 years, says she is leaving to pursue more “entrepreneurial” and lucrative opportunities in the housing sector, though she has no formal offer at the moment.
Known for her probing questions to home-builder executives during earnings conference calls, Ms. Zelman focused on issues such as a flood of speculators in the new-home market, an oversupply of land and problems posed by subprime mortgages. She challenged bullish home builders and analysts, who believed home sales would keep roaring despite signs of speculative excess. After relatively upbeat statements by Toll Brothers Inc. chief executive Robert Toll during a conference call last December, she asked, “I am wondering which Kool-Aid you’re drinking?”
She was ranked the top home-builder analyst in The Wall Street Journal’s 2006 “Best on the Street” analyst survey. Before Credit Suisse, she worked at Salomon Brothers (now part of Citigroup Inc.) first in investment banking and later as equity analyst, focusing on housing.
Credit Suisse said Ms. Zelman is leaving on good terms. The firm declined to say how much she was paid. “Ivy personifies great propriety research, intense conviction and unmatched competitive spirit. She helped develop some of the strongest people we have in the department,” said Lara Warner, managing director and director of U.S. equity research at Credit Suisse.
June 16, 2007 at 4:50 PM #59879davelj
ParticipantBlinding glimpse of the obvious: She will end up at a large private equity firm planning on taking advantage of the carnage in MBS, home builders, property, etc. over the next few years. That’s probably her highest and best use (re: the place where she’ll get compensated the most) and she’d be crazy not to take advantage of her circumstances.
June 16, 2007 at 4:50 PM #59912davelj
ParticipantBlinding glimpse of the obvious: She will end up at a large private equity firm planning on taking advantage of the carnage in MBS, home builders, property, etc. over the next few years. That’s probably her highest and best use (re: the place where she’ll get compensated the most) and she’d be crazy not to take advantage of her circumstances.
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