Applied Value Investing Course Outline Sep 1 2018
Applied Value Investing Course Outline Sep 1 2018
Applied Value Investing Course Outline Sep 1 2018
vii. Introduction:
This course will help students learn a practitioner’s perspective on bottom-up, value-
oriented, long-only, long-term, active investing in stocks.
The journey towards becoming a good investor is a life-long one, and this course is only a
beginning. Through the course, students will be exposed to the process of developing
investment hypotheses, conducting diligence on the business and management team,
performing financial analysis, making financial forecasts and assessing buying prices for a
variety of companies.
The course can conceptually be split into 3 parts, which build on each other:
o Building the toolkit: Developing hypotheses, assessing business and management
quality, financial analysis, forecasting and valuation (sessions 1 to 7 below)
o Applying the toolkit: Frameworks for evaluating and investing in different types
of businesses (sessions 8 to 10)
o Managing a portfolio: Moving beyond researching individual stocks towards
understanding the psychological biases / institutional issues to be overcome while
constructing and maintaining a portfolio (session 11 and 12)
viii. Objective:
The objectives of the course are:
(a) helping students build the technical and psychological tool kit required to become long-
term investors, and
(b) aiding the development of sound investment judgement.
The course is most relevant to students with an interest in long-term investing in public or
private companies.
viii. Pedagogy:
The course will use a combination of: (a) reading material (b) lectures and discussions, (c)
exercises, (d) an individual written exam, and (e) a group project.
Reading material will be shared prior to class, and the emphasis in class will be on: (i)
deepening conceptual understanding of the topic, and (ii) practical application of the
lessons learned.
Students who seek greater depth of knowledge and challenge are encouraged to go beyond
the core reading material for a class, by exploring the optional reading material as well as
by taking on optional homework.
Grades will be based on class participation (10% weightage), individual exam (50%) and
the group project at the end of the term (40%).
a. Pre-work
Each student individually has to create a paper portfolio for Rs. 1,000,000 on
September 1. Students are encouraged to create portfolios with a 2+ year investment
horizon, but they can buy / sell any stock listed on NSE / BSE, any number of times.
Leverage and derivatives are not allowed.
For each trade (including the initial portfolio), students have to write a short note (as
little as one paragraph, no more than a page) explaining their buy / sell decision, and
submit it to the teaching assistant within 2 days of the trade. More details about the
mechanics of this project will be communicated separately.
The course facilitator and the teaching assistant will evaluate portfolios, for September 1
to November 1, in session 12 (see below). On November 2, each student has to send an
email to the course facilitator and teaching assistant with the following information:
value of their portfolio as of November 1 end, the 3 biggest winners (by value and %),
the 3 biggest losers (by value and %), % of portfolio invested in the largest position, %
of portfolio invested in top 5 stocks, number of buy / sell decisions (after creating the
initial portfolio) from August 1 – November 1, and key lessons learned, in no more than
one page.
b. Group project
Students are to form groups of 6. By applying learnings from the course – assessing
business and management quality using ‘scuttlebutt’, financial analysis and valuation
techniques – each group has to make a ‘buy’ or ‘sell’ investment recommendation on
any company listed on the NSE or BSE, to an investor with a 2+ year horizon.
Students are encouraged to seek a deeper understanding of the company’s business and
management through their efforts, and go beyond focusing only on financial analysis
and forecasting. Efforts made to glean new insights about the business through their
efforts will receive extra credit during the grading process.
Each group will present their recommendation in 7 minutes, followed by 3 minutes of
questions and answers.
The group project presentation will happen after the conclusion of session 12 (see
below).
x. Course Books/Reference Materials:
The course facilitator will share a presentation for reading ahead of each session.
Excerpts from the following books will also be used during the course:
The Art of Value Investing: How the world’s best investors beat the market, by
John Heins and Whitney Tilson (‘AVI’)
The Manual of Ideas: The proven framework for finding the best value
investments, by John Mihaljevic (‘MOI’)
The sleuth investor: Uncover the best stocks before they make their move by Avner
Mandelman (‘TSI’)
The Outsiders: Eight unconventional CEOs and their radically rational blueprint for
success, by William N. Thorndike, Jr. (TO)
Quality investing: Owning the best companies for the long run, by Lawrence A.
Cunningham, Torkell T. Eide and Patrick Hargreaves (‘QI’)
Beating The Street: The best-selling author of ‘One Up On Wall Street’ shows you
how to pick winning stocks and develop a strategy for mutual funds, by Peter
Lynch with John Rothchild (‘BTS’)
A list of good books on investing, financial analysis and popular psychology will be
circulated separately – all the books on this list are entirely optional reading.
Session 7: Valuation
o Core reading: Presentation – valuation
o Other reading: Competitive Advantage Period by Michael Mauboussin and Paul
Johnson
o Other reading: Pages 184 to 206 of AVI