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before we get started. While we have sought to distill the highly complex world of investing, we can only simplify so much. Along the way, you will need to research and brush up on some basic terms and concepts. This extends to rudimentary accounting and financial calculations. Proper investing is a serious endeavor and requires real commitment. We believe, however, that the potential rewards are worth the effort.

      Our book is structured as five chapters that correspond to the five steps in our framework. We use real-world examples throughout to bring these concepts to life.

      5-Step Framework

      1 Idea Generation

      2 Identifying the Best Ideas

      3 Business & Financial Due Diligence

      4 Valuation & Catalysts

      5 Investment Decision & Portfolio Management

      Throughout the book, we focus on the opportunity that investors faced upon Delphi Automotive's initial public offering (IPO) in November 2011. By the time of the company's split in 2017, those who invested from the beginning made nearly five times their money. Using our framework, we take you back in time to illustratively guide you through the process that helped discover, analyze, value, and bless this stock.

      Upon emergence, Delphi featured a focused product portfolio, globally cost-competitive structure, and revamped balance sheet. The company also had a concentrated shareholder base that was very active in pursuing value creation. Over time, these core shareholders would be natural sellers as Delphi's stock performed.

      As part of their value creation plan, the lead shareholders assembled a world-class Board of Directors, comprised of public company CEOs, auto industry veterans, and highly experienced domain experts (e.g., technology, human resources, capital markets, and M&A). Former DuPont Chairman and CEO Jack Krol was appointed Chairman of the Board and played a critical role. His background as lead director of Tyco International, where he oversaw their successful corporate overhaul, was a key factor in the lead shareholders' decision to bring him on board. He and his fellow directors were instrumental in working with management to develop the strategy around capital allocation, IPO preparation, and messaging to investors.

      In late 2011, Delphi went public at a $22 share price. The new strategy would prove enduring over the next several years, persisting long after O'Neal passed the reins to CFO Kevin Clark in 2015. Along the way, there were numerous strategic initiatives that created significant value for shareholders, culminating with the tax-free spin of Delphi's Powertrain Systems segment in 2017.

      By the end of 2017, just prior to Delphi's separation into two entities, the stock was trading above $100 per share. Investors who seized upon the opportunity at Delphi's IPO were rewarded with a 375% return. This represented a 30% annualized return vs. the S&P 500 at 13%.

      Step I: Idea Generation

      Step I focuses on how professional investors source investment ideas. This process requires a great deal of patience and discipline. It is not uncommon to review dozens, or even hundreds, of companies before a high-quality opportunity is discovered.

      Our book focuses on bottom-up investing, which is a company-first approach to identifying attractive stocks. You start with the individual company and perform in-depth analysis on its business drivers, financial performance, valuation, and future prospects. We also discuss the top-down approach, where you search for opportunities based on macroeconomic (“macro”) or secular themes. Key top-down strategies center on identifying global or domestic market and business trends/cycles, and buying the beneficiaries. The flip side is to avoid or even short the victims.

      In Step I, we discuss the primary buckets from which professional investors source their ideas. We start with undervalued companies for whom there is a path to improved financial performance or a higher valuation. We then focus on companies undertaking value-enhancing corporate actions, such as mergers & acquisitions (M&A), spin-offs & divestitures, restructurings & turnarounds, stock buybacks & dividends, IPOs, and insider buying. Lastly, we explain how to track proven investors to help source new ideas.

      Step II: Identifying the Best Ideas

      The initial idea search often yields dozens of potential investment opportunities. Step II explains how to parse through a broad list to identify the best ones. This involves a deeper examination of each stock in order to focus your attention on ideas that can become “core” positions. All you need are a few high-quality stocks to kick-start a strong portfolio.

      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

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