



As described in great detail in the forthcoming book, Mission: Intangible. Managing risk and reputation to create enterprise value, the data show that there is a strong association between reputation and long-term economic returns. The rank order of 3-year returns for BlackRock (NYSE:BLK), Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS), Deutsche Bank (NYSE:DB), and Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) shown in the chart above adapted from bigcharts.com correspond to their rank order Steel City Re Corporate Reputation Index metrics and inversely to the volatility value and vector of that metric.

The data also show, as illustrated in the above chart that also shows Morgan Stanley's acute reputation drop, that the Capital Markets sector as a group experienced a reputation rise this past year, but that the variance within this group also increased.
Last, as described previously, the data show that the short term distortions of extraordinary returns following extraordinary losses do not skew the reputation metrics. Firms that have superior reputations are more resilient, will fall more slowly in periods of upheaval, and therefore have less ground to regain. The bright side of this relative lack of short-term upside is that the lower volatility translates to lower cost of capital.
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