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Exane BNP Paribas spent the past five years in second place.

    Vincent Laurencin & teamExane BNP Paribas

    second teamLaurent Poinsot & teamCA Cheuvreux

    third teamFabrice Théveneau & teamSocGen

    Exane BNP Paribas spent the past five years in second place. This year the 83-member troupe guided by Vincent Laurencin climbs the final step to finish on top. “What sets Exane apart from other brokers is that their analysts are consistently aware of what happens across Europe as well as the U.S. and Asia — that’s essential for global investors like us,” explains one portfolio manager. Clients applaud the group’s January 2009 upgrade from neutral to outperform on semiconductor manufacturer STMicroelectronics, at €3.78, on valuation. The stock had jumped to €6.43 by the end of the year, a 70.1 percent gain that beat the broad market by 35.9 percentage points. “They’re always the first ones to call me with up-to-the-minute intelligence whenever there’s news at a company,” raves one of the team’s many fans, adding: “They’ve always got the best ideas.” Laurencin, 33, earned a master’s degree in finance at Paris’s HEC in 1999; he worked as a senior executive at online auctioneer IBazar, then moved to Exane after IBazar was acquired by EBay in 2001. After five years at No. 1, the 26-strong CA Cheuvreux squad under Laurent Poinsot slips to second place. The group added BNP Paribas to its most-favored list in March, dubbing the bank’s shares a bargain at €31.81. The stock had shot up 65.5 percent, to €52.63, by September, and the analysts removed it from their list. It closed the year at €55.90. “During the global crisis, they were very good at keeping their perspective by sticking to long-term fundamentals,” observes one grateful booster. Fabrice Théveneau and his 150-member squadron at SocGen rise from runner-up to third place. One investor touts the firm for its “broader range of pan-European stocks, which provides good international comparisons and creates value.” The analysts upgraded auto-components supplier Faurecia from sell to buy in July, at €6.25, on the premise that the shares were undervalued in view of the company’s “reinforced balance sheet” and “vigorous and ambitious cost-cutting.” The stock catapulted 146.4 percent, to €15.40, through December. “I’m quite happy with their stock picks,” applauds one investor.

    To go back to the index page, click on theBest European Analysts of the Year: 2010 All-Europe Research Team.

    To read the article, click on:Reversal of Fortunes: The 2010 All-Europe Research Team

    Click here to access the complete rankings of the2010 All-Europe Research Team

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