The Little Book of Investing Like the Pros. Joshua Rosenbaum
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СКАЧАТЬ thinning of the herd relies upon performing high level research on each potential idea in a quick and systematic manner. Towards that end, we provide you with a framework that helps you do just that. It centers on investment thesis, business model, management team, risks & considerations, and financials & valuation. This preliminary analysis is necessary to separate fool's gold from the “real McCoy.”

      We also provide a corresponding investment write-up template to help you track and organize your research on each stock idea. This template maps to our Step II framework and allows for easy comparison across multiple companies.

      The longer the list of potential ideas generated from Step I, the more difficult the task of refining. Sometimes, an idea may jump off the page as a game-changer for your portfolio. In most cases, however, the ideas with the highest upside opportunity are not so black and white. Once the obvious outliers are eliminated, in-depth analysis on the remaining stocks can begin.

      In Step III, it's time to perform a much deeper dive on those opportunities that survived the culling process. More thorough business and financial research is needed following the early stage vetting. In other words, this is the key due diligence phase.

      On the business front, we demonstrate how to judge whether a company is high quality, or can become high quality. This involves examining its core strengths as well as the risks that could potentially derail your investment thesis. Much of this work is qualitative, requiring sound judgment and insight. Experience and familiarity with specific business models and sectors is particularly helpful here. Your personal interests and perspectives may also come in handy.

      On the financial front, the company's core financial statements need to be thoroughly scrubbed to determine its track record, health, and prospects. A large portion of this analysis is simply making observations about key financial items and seeking defensible answers. You must be acutely aware of any key weaknesses related to growth, margins, FCF, or balance sheet. We also show you how to develop a financial projection model, which serves as the basis for your valuation work in Step IV.

      Step IV: Valuation & Catalysts

      In Step IV, we turn our attention to valuation, arguably the core component of the investment process. Here you need to determine what the company is worth, whether it is cheap or expensive, and whether there are any “catalysts” for revaluation. Even a stock that passes the business and financial test with flying colors may fail the valuation test. In other words, it may be too expensive at current levels to produce an attractive return. This is the trap of “good company, bad stock.”

      In this chapter, we teach you how to perform the key valuation methodologies at the core of any stock analysis. These include market and intrinsic valuation techniques, such as comparable companies and discounted cash flow analysis. We also discuss M&A valuation approaches, including precedent transactions, leveraged buyout analysis, and accretion/(dilution). More nuanced techniques, such as sum-of-the-parts and net asset value, are then introduced to round out your skill set.

      Step V: Investment Decision & Portfolio Management

      You have identified a compelling idea, performed due diligence, and have a view on what the company is worth. All of this informed your all-important price target. It is now time to make the ultimate investment decision. Is the stock a buy, short, track, or pass?

      In the event a buy or short decision is made, the work doesn't stop there. Going forward, the position must be constantly monitored. New developments may materially change the initial investment thesis for better or worse. Effective monitoring involves constant reflection, analysis, and synthesis of events that may impact the underlying business.

      Disciplined investors employ risk management techniques to optimize their portfolios and protect their downside. Key tools include capping exposure levels, as well as setting guidelines for limiting losses and taking profit. Exposure levels refer to individual position sizing, sector concentration, and geographic focus, among others. We also teach you basic techniques for hedging and portfolio stress testing.

      Notes

      1 1 Companies exhibiting consistent above-market growth coupled with attractive valuation levels.

      2 2 Effective December 2017, Delphi Automotive split into two separate enterprises via a tax-free spin of its Powertrain Segment. This segment was renamed Delphi Technologies. The Electrical/Electronic Architecture and Electronics & Safety segments were rebranded as Aptiv. More on that later …

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