---
name: writing-equity-research-notes
language: en
description: Creates structured equity research notes with thesis, valuation, risks, and rating justification. Use when initiating coverage, updating research opinions, or writing investment notes.
tags:
  - drafting
  - equity-research
  - risk
  - investment
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Equity Research
    - Investment Management
  document_types:
    - Written Document
  skill_modes:
    - Drafting
---
# Writing Equity Research Notes

## When To Use

- Initiating coverage on a new equity name
- Updating an existing rating or price target after earnings, guidance changes, or material events
- Writing a thematic or sector note that includes individual stock views
- Preparing internal investment committee memos supporting buy/sell/hold recommendations
- Responding to client requests for a written opinion on a specific security

## Inputs To Gather

- **Company identifiers**: Ticker, exchange, GICS sector/industry classification
- **Financial statements**: Last 3 years of income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement; most recent quarterly filing
- **Consensus estimates**: Street revenue, EPS, and EBITDA estimates for current and next two fiscal years
- **Valuation data**: Current share price, market cap, enterprise value, trading multiples (P/E, EV/EBITDA, EV/Revenue, FCF yield), and peer comparable set
- **Catalyst calendar**: Upcoming earnings date, product launches, regulatory decisions, index rebalance dates
- **Management commentary**: Latest earnings call transcript and investor day materials
- **Prior coverage**: Any existing internal notes, rating history, or price target changes on the name
- **Compliance constraints**: Firm-specific restricted list status, quiet period windows, and required disclosures [VERIFY]

## Workflow

1. **Define the note type and scope**
   - Determine if this is an initiation, rating change, estimate revision, earnings recap, or thematic note
   - Confirm the target audience (institutional clients, internal portfolio managers, or investment committee)
   - Set the rating framework to use (e.g., Buy/Hold/Sell, Overweight/Equal-weight/Underweight) [VERIFY firm-specific rating scale]

2. **Build the investment thesis**
   - State the core thesis in 1-2 sentences: what the market is missing or mispricing
   - Identify 2-4 supporting pillars (revenue drivers, margin expansion levers, capital allocation, competitive moat)
   - Quantify each pillar where possible (e.g., "We see 300bps of gross margin expansion from mix shift into software")

3. **Construct the financial model summary**
   - Present key forecast assumptions: revenue growth, operating margin trajectory, capex intensity, and capital return
   - Show a condensed P&L bridge from consensus to your estimates, highlighting where and why you differ
   - Include a sensitivity table on the 1-2 variables that most move the valuation

4. **Derive valuation and price target**
   - Select primary valuation methodology (DCF, comparable multiples, sum-of-the-parts, or blend)
   - Justify the target multiple or discount rate with reference to historical trading range, peer set, and growth profile
   - Calculate the price target and implied upside/downside from current price
   - Present a bull/base/bear scenario framework with probability-weighted expected value if appropriate

5. **Identify risks and mitigants**
   - List the top 3-5 risks to the thesis, each with a brief mitigant or monitoring trigger
   - Distinguish between company-specific risks (execution, balance sheet, key-person) and macro/sector risks (regulatory, cyclical, FX)
   - Flag any binary event risks (FDA decision, litigation outcome, contract renewal) with expected timing

6. **Draft the note**
   - Open with a header block: ticker, rating, price target, current price, market cap, and key metrics
   - Lead with an executive summary (3-5 bullet points capturing rating, target, thesis, and key catalyst)
   - Organize body sections: Thesis, Financial Overview, Valuation, Risks, Appendix (model tables, comp tables)
   - Use concise, assertion-driven language; avoid hedging without substance

7. **Add compliance disclosures**
   - Include required ownership/conflict disclosures per firm policy and applicable regulation [VERIFY — FINRA 2241, MiFID II, or firm-specific requirements]
   - Add analyst certification language if required
   - Note any material non-public information restrictions or quiet period status

## Output

The final research note should contain:

- **Header block**: Ticker | Rating | Price Target | Current Price | Market Cap | Sector
- **Executive summary**: 3-5 bullets with the actionable conclusion up front
- **Investment thesis**: Narrative with quantified supporting pillars
- **Financial summary**: Key estimates table, consensus comparison, sensitivity analysis
- **Valuation**: Methodology, target derivation, scenario analysis
- **Risk factors**: Prioritized list with mitigants
- **Appendix**: Detailed model, comparable company table, disclosures

Format as a professional research note with consistent heading hierarchy, right-aligned data tables, and source citations for third-party data.

## Quality Checks

- [ ] Rating, price target, and implied return are internally consistent with the valuation methodology
- [ ] Estimates in the note match the financial model; no stale or contradictory figures
- [ ] Every quantitative claim has a sourced data point or is explicitly labeled as an estimate/assumption
- [ ] Bull/base/bear scenarios span a credible range and the base case aligns with the price target
- [ ] Risk factors are specific to this company and thesis — no generic boilerplate risks
- [ ] Compliance disclosures match the firm's current requirements [VERIFY]
- [ ] Tone is assertion-driven and professional; no unsupported superlatives ("best-in-class," "massive opportunity") without evidence
- [ ] Note is self-contained: a reader unfamiliar with the name can understand the thesis without external documents
