![]() ![]() Recommended by: Bill Ackman, Bruce Berkowitz, Joel Greenblatt, John Griffin and Don Yacktman.Ĭoming in at #4 on the list of best investing books of all time are Warren Buffett’s essays and annual letters to shareholders, in which the famed investor shares his wisdom and methods. ![]() However, with six recommendations out of the 20 lists I reviewed, it’s fair to say that You Can Be A Stock Market Genius has made an impact on many of the best investors of our generation. Researching these opportunities does require work - which may be part of the reason why the book hasn’t caught on with mainstream individual investors. You Can Be A Stock Market Genius details how individual investors can use special situation investing to beat the market. (Greenblatt’s second book, The Little Book That Beats The Market, is #17.) While it’s too popular to be called a hidden gem, it’s fair to say that You Can Be A Stock Market Genius has flown under the radar, ranking at just #60 in Amazon’s finance section. Recommended by: Bill Ackman, Michael Burry, David Einhorn, Seth Klarman, Dan Loeb and Guy Spier. You Can Be A Stock Market Genius by Joel Greenblatt ![]() The newest version of Security Analysis, published in 2008, includes insight from some of today’s top investors, including Seth Klarman, Howard Marks, Bruce Berkowitz, Bruce Greenwald and others. So if you plan on reading both, I’d start with the former. While Graham’s The Intelligent Investor is by no means a light read, Security Analysis is an even more detailed overview of Graham’s stock picking methods. Recommended by: Bill Ackman, Bruce Berkowitz, Warren Buffett, Michael Burry, Joel Greenblatt, John Griffin, Seth Klarman, Walter Schloss and Don Yacktman.īenjamin Graham’s first book, Security Analysis (co-written with David Dodd), comes in at #2 on the list of best investing books of all time.īuffet, who also wrote the forward, is quoted on the back cover calling it, “a roadmap for investing that I have now been following for 57 years.” In 2003, respected Wall Street Journal financial columnist Jason Zweig updated the book with his own commentary and footnotes. Known as “the father of value investing,” Graham revised the book four times, with the last revision being published in 1971. “įirst published in 1949, Benjamin Graham’s now-classic book has impacted generations of investors and is recommended by many of today’s well-known hedge fund managers, including, Joel Greenblatt and Michael Burry. ![]() I suggest that all investors read those chapters and reread them every time the market has been especially strong or weak. He continues: “Chapters 8 and 20 have been the bedrock of my investing activities for more than 60 years. Warren Buffett has called The Intelligent Investor, “by far the best book on investing ever written.” Recommended by: Bill Ackman, Bruce Berkowitz, Warren Buffett, Michael Burry, Joel Greenblatt, Seth Klarman, Mohnish Pabrai, Walter Schlossl and Guy Spier. The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham University of Waterloo Quantitative Finance Reading List.Boston University Quantitative Finance Reading List.Columbia University Financial Engineering Reading List.Carnegie Mellon Quantitative Finance Reading List.The Little Book of Common Sense Investing by John C. The Great Crash 1929 by John Kenneth Galbraith Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini Common Stock, Uncommon Profits and Other Writings by Philip Fisher Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre The Warren Buffett Way by Robert Hagstrom ![]()
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