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发表于 2013-8-16 14:35
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I thought itera’s responses were reasonable and accurate. Far easier to switch from direct investing to manager selection/fund of funds than vice versa. I also think that just because you don’t think what people do is “rocket science” doesn’t make it easy – as you noted, there’s a lot of luck involved, and oftentimes being a good investor has as much to do with the job as being a good psychologist and manager of time. I think people that think it’s fundamentally “easy” have never actually put money to work. There’s nothing more nerve-wracking than being tasked with making decisions involving millions of dollars of capital.
Also, that you’re confident that you can pick up modeling without having seen the workings of a sell-side model is a bit concerning, but let me try to shed some light on this. The key to being a good analyst is really understanding two things: how businesses work, and why a company is overvalued/undervalued. Only then can you come up with a variant view. I’ve worked on assignments where I don’t spend more than an hour building a back-of-the-envelope model, and other situations where I’ve had to develop a fully loaded LBO or M&A model. I feel a greater sense of analytical comfort sometimes building a full model (probably owing to my days on the sell-side and private equity), but adding more variables to an equation doesn’t always lead to better analysis. Sometimes the simplest stories are the most investible.
As for sectors to start, I suggest you begin with companies that you’re naturally interested in and that have business models where you can understand the unit economics. All too often, sell-side is focused on forecasting overall top-line growth instead of the basic building blocks of the business, so looking at the unit economics can often reveal the disconnect between where a stock is trading now and what it should be worth. This will be a lot easier to do if there’s a company where you’re naturally curious to know how they work. Investing isn’t for those with short attention spans and it’s hard to find good investment opportunities if you’re not interested in what the company fundamentally does.
Anyway, I suggest you read the articles referenced in my signature for some good starting points. I did two interview series with Mergers & Inquisitions – one on breaking into sell-side research and another on breaking into hedge funds – so you perhaps you’ll find something interesting there. I’m pretty sure you will. |
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