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Survival Kit for an Equity Analyst. Shin HorieЧитать онлайн книгу.

Survival Kit for an Equity Analyst - Shin Horie


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Many were at the very early stage of becoming commercial entities and were keen to learn from overseas companies regarding their internal organization, production, marketing, etc. As a non-local analyst with only a little local knowledge and connectivity, I tried to apply the basic global industry framework when analysing H-share companies. My assessment of the positioning of each company within the global competitive landscape was well received by investors not just regionally but globally too. Since I had spent a lot of time walking around factory floors of Japanese industrial companies, I was able to gauge the level of manufacturing proficiency of their Chinese counterparts by visiting the factories and asking a number of questions. At that time, many industries in China were extremely fragmented and I was able to provide insight into their potential consolidation process by leveraging the experience of developed markets. I was extremely happy to find that such skillsets gained through analysing Japanese and global capital goods companies was, and still remains, helpful to those investing in the China market. Although I was not aware of the concepts then, this was probably my first real attempt to use ‘time machine’ and ‘pattern recognition’ analysis that is discussed in Chapter 1. The fact that such tools were so powerful that even an analyst who was very new to China coverage was able to differentiate and add value almost immediately was a valuable lesson. Although I felt an extreme bull on Chinese industrial development at the time, in hindsight I was actually very conservative in my projections.

      A Truly Global Research Experience – Semiconductor Analyst (1998–2007)

      Having covered China H-share companies for three years I felt like testing my skills as an analyst on a truly global platform. In 1998, I was fortunate enough to join the Goldman Sachs technology research team covering the Japanese semiconductor industry. Since I knew nothing about semiconductors, I spent the first several months in the New York office learning the basics of the industry and getting connected with the US team. It was an incredible environment for me to learn from the ‘all-stars’ of technology research. One thing that really surprised me was the level of respect and attention research analysts and major investors received from corporate top management. Back then in Asia, investor relations was something corporates broadly treated as a low priority job, certainly not a necessity. Hence, analysts in Asia needed to make substantial efforts to establish ‘give-and-take’ relationships with corporate management before they were fully open to you.

      It was my dream come true in terms of global research. I exchanged multiple emails and phone calls each day with my global analyst counterparts in the United States, Taiwan, Korea, Europe, and Japan, sharing details of new findings. It is blindingly obvious now to connect Asian countries together but back then research teams were structured on a by-country basis. We were probably one of the first to create a fully functional Pan-Asia technology research team among sell-side research houses. Many people from the strategy divisions of global technology companies would come regularly to see us to garner our thoughts on the broad industry because even large technology companies did not have such a comprehensive understanding of the whole technology hardware industry on such a real-time basis.

      New Lexicon:


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