Financial Institutions: Banks/Midcap 2010
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Financial Institutions: Banks/Midcap 2010

After two years at No. 2, Kevin St. Pierre rises to the top.

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Kevin St. Pierre Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.


The buy side says: “Kevin provides valuable insights with a focus on valuation.”


After two years at No. 2, Kevin St. Pierre rises to the top. “He knows the banks he follows incredibly well,” cheers one buy-side champion. In September 2009 the Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. analyst issued valuation-­based upgrades from neutral to outperform on Regions Financial Corp. of Birmingham, Alabama, and Milwaukee’s Marshall & Ilsley Corp., at $6.10 and $8.05, respectively. In April, after the stocks had soared to $8.79 and $9.91 — gaining 44.1 and 23.1 percent at a time when the sector climbed 33.8 percent — he dubbed the shares fully valued and downgraded them to hold. By the end of August, they had slid to $6.43 and $6.55. “He provides the most in-depth fundamental insight into longer-­term economics in the bank sector — beyond the ‘quarterly noise’ that many other analysts overly focus on — and provides more-­quantified and longer-­term analysis,” avers one buy-side supporter. St. Pierre, 43, earned an MBA at New York University’s Stern School of Business in 1997 and worked at Booz Allen Hamilton before joining Bernstein in 2000.


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After two years in the runner-up position, Chip Dillon of Credit Suisse rises to No. 3. “He is able to understand more-esoteric issues specific to the space,” touts one client. Dillon initiated coverage of Pactiv Corp., the maker of Hefty brand trash and sandwich bags and a producer of food-service and food-packaging products, in March with an outperform rating, making the case that the Lake Forest, Illinois–based company was undervalued on the basis of earnings and cash flow.
Citi’s P.J. Juvekar, 43, finishes in first place for a second consecutive year. “The analyst makes timely calls, provides excellent written research and knows the industry better than his peers,” insists one portfolio manager. Juvekar upgraded PPG Industries to buy in January, at $59.97, telling clients that the Pittsburgh-­based producer of coatings for industrial, architectural and auto markets would benefit from increased auto production, as inventories had been depleted in 2009 because of the Car Allowance Rebate System, better known as the cash-for-­clunkers program. Juvekar also believed the company would reap benefits from rising industrial production, to which PPG’s earnings are highly correlated.
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