Wall Street's most powerful analysts often don't get paid to be right.
They get paid to keep the relationship.
Here's an example –
Morgan Stanley's top analyst Adam Jonas was a perennial Tesla bull by raising his price target consistently. He's been doing it for years. Every upgrade sends another wave of retail investors piling in.
Maybe he was a true bull…
But Morgan Stanley has also made hundreds of millions off Elon Musk. They underwrote Tesla's stock offerings. They've worked deals tied to SpaceX. Do you think Musk would gladly send these lucrative businesses to the bank if they put out bearish reports on Tesla?
Most likely not. Morgan Stanley knew it, too.
This is how the whole game works. There's supposed to be a wall between the research desk and the banking desk. But it is not 100% foolproof. Not when the fees are that big.
So the question is simple:
So what do you do when you can't trust Wall Street reports?
You watch the money.
Not the words. Not the price targets. Not the 52-page model built on assumptions that conveniently support whatever the bank needs them to support.
You watch what institutions actually do with their capital — in real time, through the dark pool market, where a $300 million order can't be walked back with a revised price target.
When serious money moves through dark pools, it's not a recommendation.
It's a commitment.
And commitments don't lie the way analyst reports do.
TradeAlgo's AI tracks dark pool flow and sends you free SMS alerts for stocks with unusual activity.
No hidden agenda. Just actionable signals.
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