Got a quarter? Can you flip it? Congratulations, you're a stock guru.

For months now, I've been using Motley Fool CAPS to evaluate the Wall Street wizards who rate stocks and gauge the likelihood that those ratings will pan out. In columns like "Get to Know a Guru," we met the unsung heroes (and villains) of Wall Street. In "This Just In," we put the experts to the test, determining whether their upgrades and downgrades are worth the virtual paper they're printed on.

Today, I want to step back and see the big picture. Using the full breadth of CAPS to take a snapshot of the Wall Street Wise, I'll lay out for you who's hot, who's not, and overall, whether these analytical hotshots are smarter than a fifth-grader.

News flash: They're not
We often hear this statistic: "80% of mutual funds underperform the market." But until now, it's been hard to fact-check that bit of commonly accepted Foolishness. Fortunately, CAPS does something nearly as good. It records every stock pick made by 179 professional stock pickers, from professional talking heads like Jim Cramer to financial bastions such as JPMorgan Chase. It tracks the recommendations' performance, and most importantly, it records whether the picks are beating or lagging the S&P 500's return. So how are the experts doing?

Not so hot, as it turns out. Of the 176 professional players tracked on CAPS, fewer than half (71) can claim better than 50% accuracy on their picks.

Wall Street wall of shame
Fasten your seat belts, folks, because I'm pulling no punches today. Meet "Wall Street's Dirty Half-Dozen" -- the six least-accurate institutional investors, along with their worst recommendations (that they've made public):

Wall Street Worst Firm

Accuracy

One Especially Bad Recommendation

How Bad?*

RBC Dain Rauscher

11%

Manulife Financial  (NYSE:MFC)

19 points

Punk, Ziegel & Co.

28%

Citigroup (NYSE:C)

46 points

Capital One Southcoast

29%

Chesapeake Energy  (NYSE:CHK)

23 points

Noble Financial

32%

Healthways (NASDAQ:HWAY)

23 points

Nollenberger Capital

34%

NVIDIA Corporation  (NASDAQ:NVDA)

16 points

Dougherty & Co.

34%

A-Power Energy  (NASDAQ:APWR)

34 points

Data as of April 14. *Which is to say, how badly is this active pick underperforming the S&P 500?  

Now, mind you, these analysts aren't always wrong. On (rare) occasion, even the least prescient banker will luck upon a winner. Case in point: Dougherty came very close to "calling the bottom" on beleaguered armored vehicles maker Force Protection (NASDAQ:FRPT) when it recommended bottom-fishing around three bucks and change back in November.

That prescient pick has already doubled for Dougherty -- but fails to counterbalance the analyst's many more wrongheaded bets. On average, even this "best" of the six firms named above guesses wrong about twice as often as right. And while batting .340 is pretty good in baseball, it just doesn't cut it when you've got investors tendering you their hard-earned money in exchange for good advice.

So pardon my bluntness, but I think you're better off flipping a quarter than paying these analysts for investing advice.

Lies, damned lies, and statistics
Confession time: The numbers above certainly suggest that the old truism about mutual funds, and the professionals who run and market them, holds true. But in a new service like CAPS (still in beta, by the way), there are bound to be bugs in the system.

Some such "bugs" are intentional, such as our decision to not permit ratings on "half-penny" stocks with market caps of less than $100 million, or stock prices under $1.50 per share. Some are not -- glitches in the system which may unintentionally affect the statistics CAPS generates. So before the analysts named above cry bloody murder, let me extend the following olive branch: We're listening.

If you've got a gripe about your rating, and the facts to back it up, we'll work with you to fix the problem. Drop our CAPS feedback board a note, and we'll give your arguments a fair hearing. On the other hand, if you're just mad because we're highlighting statistics that you'd rather not advertise, there's not a lot we can do for you.

(Well, actually, there is one thing. Just like anyone else, you're welcome to check out Motley Fool Stock Advisor, where fully 60% of our active picks are beating the market. Not every stock we recommend turns out to be a winner, but overall, our portfolio is currently beating the market by more than 36 points per pick. This offer gets you Fool access free for 30 days.)