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RVB's Market MusingsFrom engineer to Investment Management MBA student...generally my stream of conscious thoughts. Hope it's useful! |
Top Investment Books
Posted on 02/20/2007 22:51 PM | Link | Post Comment
My list of favorite / most influential investment books:1) One Up on Wall Street - Peter Lynch If I could give my parents one investing book to read, this would be the one. Lynch takes a complicated subject (investing) and boils it down to some simple lessons. Earnings drive stock prices, overpaying can be painful, and the best investments are all around us - just pay attention. Even professional investors should probably read this book once a year to dampen some of the noise we are subjected to daily.
2) Trading in the Zone - Mark Douglass This book isn't technically about investing, rather it is meant for traders. In the end, we're all just traders with different time horizons, anyway, so who cares? Douglass' lessons are all about the psyche needed to partake in our capital markets. This book should be read every year. Its genius is in its simplicity and the visual examples he uses. Anyone with intellectual curiousity will realize the discussion also could help explain many life experiences.3) Expectations Investing - Alfred Rappaport & Michael Mauboussin This book helps to better explain how stocks are priced...that is it attempts to give a methodology for understanding the expectations of future company performance built into today's stock price. It is NOT for my parents - it uses finance and accounting terms that the layperson cannot understand, which is unfortunate. Nonetheless, the framework of thought is a good one to understand because it helps to understand how stocks are priced and why. The authors created a website to aid with the concepts, too.
4) How to Makes Money in Stocks - William O'Niel This book sort of breaks all the "rules". O'Niel will tell you that the P/E is useless (true from the alpha tests I have run) and that buying stocks high and selling them higher is the key to big returns. Who can argue with his track record? Professionals would simply call O'Niel a momentum investor - the equivalent of a used car salesman among money managers. But, his lessons are quite important and his methodology is tried and true, albeit not for the faint of heart type of investor.
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Examples
ATM Wallstreet - Mon Oct 06, 2008 03:39PM
Made several great trades today. Traded the QID, QQ [read more]
Made several great trades today. Traded the QID, QQ [read more]
ATM Wallstreet - Tue Oct 07, 2008 10:07PM
Today we have the Fed speaking and release of Fed mi [read more]
Today we have the Fed speaking and release of Fed mi [read more]
Morpheus Trading - Tue Oct 07, 2008 08:33AM
NOTE: Please click on the charts below to enlarge them [read more]
NOTE: Please click on the charts below to enlarge them [read more]













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