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How To Make Money In Stocks: A Winning System in Good Times or Bad, 3rd Edition: William O’Neil

  • Filed under: Recommended

How To Make Money In Stocks: A Winning System in Good Times or Bad, 3rd Edition: William O'Neil

Editorial Reviews

From the school of unemotional investing comes the classic How to Make Money in Stocks, by Wall Street analyst and publisher William O’Neil. Readers new to securities will find it an excellent primer, one that relies on time-honored indicators such as quarterly earnings, market capitalization, and daily indexes. O’Neil’s study of winning stocks stretches back to the 1960s, and he shares his insights here, describing what characterizes a growth stock, when to cut your losses (at 7 or 8 percent, no more), and how to spot a market top.

The techniques in How to Make Money in Stocks are hardly revolutionary, but therein lies their strength, as O’Neil claims his is “a winning system in good times or bad.” Investors interested in Net stocks might be disappointed–the author’s first rule is that a company must show a pattern of growing profits, which disqualifies many dot coms. (Try Rule Breakers, Rule Makers for a different take.) O’Neil’s approach to stocks is, above all, rational, and he pays little heed to market hype.

Those new to investing would do well to read this book before embarking, and even more seasoned traders may find How to Make Money in Stocks a refreshing return to basics. Markets may swing bull and bear, but O’Neil promises to stand firm. –Demian McLean
–This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

THE BUSINESSWEEK, USA TODAY, AND WALL STREET JOURNAL BUSINESS BESTSELLER!

The bestselling guide to buying stocks, from the founder of Investor’s Business Daily­­now completely revised and updated

When it was first published, How to Make Money in Stocks hit the investing world like a jolt, providing readers with the first in-depth explanation of William J. O’Neil’s innovative CAN SLIM investing method. Five years later, O’Neil, founder for the industry icon Investor’s Business Daily, revised his classic text and provided readers with a newer glimpse on how the average investor can make money in the equities market.

This third edition of How to Make Money in Stocks has been revised and updated with new chapters designed to help investors increase their performance.

Like his international bestselling 24 Essential Lessons for Investment Success, which stayed on international business bestseller lists for close to 6 months in 2000, How to Make Money in Stocks is the best reference for the individual investor in how to stay afloat and ahead in the rocky and volatile equities markets of the 21st century.

Order How To Make Money In Stocks: A Winning System in Good Times or Bad, 3rd Edition: William O’Neil form Amazon.

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  • The Little Book That Makes You Rich: A Proven Market-Beating Formula for Growth Investing (Little Books. Big Profits): Louis Navellier, Steve Forbes

    • Filed under: Recommended

    The Little Book That Makes You Rich: A Proven Market-Beating Formula for Growth Investing (Little Books. Big Profits): Louis Navellier, Steve Forbes

    Editorial Reviews

    From Publishers Weekly
    Self confessed numbers geek Navellier has developed what he claims is an effective and durable system to beat the stock market, long thought a money-loser by financiers due to its self-correcting nature. Rather than focus on one or two indicators, Navellier has weighted a basket of eight variables (”earnings revisions,” “operating margins,” “free cash flow,” etc.), a quantitative strategy he shares in complex detail and happily accessible prose. Looking into the hows and whys of stock performance, Navellier lays open the complex economic environment and explicates his eight indicators in depth, showing how they relate to the market and the real world. Though he relates choosing stocks to everyday activities such as household budgeting and sports (”Never fall in love with your second baseman or your stocks”), his precise “by the numbers” approach is far removed from emotional interference. Still, he does take into account investors’ personal preferences and predicament-risk level, stress, age, tax situation and so on. Providing numerous successful examples of his system’s past performance, one can’t help but wonder how long this system will continue to yield results; still, this good-natured guidebook will help anyone new to investing or interested in learning a new way to look at the market.
    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    Review
    “Navellier builds a good case for this of investing” (Bloomberg News, Wednesday 21st November 2007) “This is a very helpful guide to building a strong portfolio without spending a great amount of time on it.” (Pensions World, January 2008) “…the book offers a fundamental understanding of how to get rich using the best in growth investing strategies.” (Gulf Business, March)

    “Navellier builds a good case for this of investing”  (Bloomberg News, Wednesday 21st November 2007)

    “A useful book on growth investing. . . Perhaps the greatest appeal of Mr. Navellier’s effort. . . is not that he offers a step-by-step guide to what he looks for in a growth company . . . The real joy comes from his frequent admonitions that Wall Street is not as rational as it would like to pretend, and in fact it is often driven either by fear — as it is these days — or by greed.” (The New York Times)

    “Navellier builds a good case for this style of investing. It might work for you.” (Bloomberg News)

    “A real contribution to investment literature. . . ” (MarketWatch)

    “No Greek letters or complex equations are necessary for understanding and even emulating Navellier. He focuses on eight straightforward factors for sorting the wheat from the chaff and has seen his leading newsletter, Emerging Growth, outperform the overall market nearly fourfold over 22 years. His mutual and institutional stock funds have performed handsomely too, with his Touchstone Large Cap Growth in the top 3% and 13% of similar funds over one and three years, respectively, according to Morningstar.” (Dow Jones newswire)

    “‘One of the chief things I have learned is that numbers do not have emotions. . . They don’t panic; they don’t get greedy. They don’t have an argument with their spouse or associates and make bad decisions as a result.’ True enough — and for all investors, words to live by.” (Registered Rep magazine)

    “Navellier did a good job with the book and offers a nice introduction to screening. . . He should be given full credit for freely opening up his system to everyone.” (The Kirk Report)

    “This is a very helpful guide to building a strong portfolio without spending a great amount of time on it.”  (Pensions World, January 2008)

    “…the book offers a fundamental understanding of how to get rich using the best in growth investing strategies.” (Gulf Business, March)

    Order The Little Book That Makes You Rich: A Proven Market-Beating Formula for Growth Investing (Little Books. Big Profits): Louis Navellier, Steve Forbes form Amazon.

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  • Enough: True Measures of Money, Business, and Life: John C. Bogle

    • Filed under: Recommended

    Enough: True Measures of Money, Business, and Life: John C. Bogle

    Editorial Reviews

    Amazon.com Exclusive: William J. Bernstein on Enough
    William Bernstein, Ph.D., M.D. is the critically acclaimed author, financial theorist and historian whose books include A Splendid Exchange: How Trade Shaped the World, The Birth of Plenty, The Four Pillars of Investing, and The Intelligent Asset Allocator. Bernstein is frequently quoted in national publications, including The Wall Street Journal, Barron’s, Money, and Forbes.

    If you are wondering about the cause of the current market crisis, then you haven’t been reading enough of Jack Bogle.

    Because he certainly knows not only where, but why and how. For decades Jack has been communicating his disquiet in previous books, speeches, and public testimony. Years from now, when historians and investors dissect the economic and market meltdowns of 2008, they’ll consult this slim, well-written volume.

    In order to understand the intellectual and moral platform from which he surveys the economic wreckage, you need to know a little of his story. Bogle founded one of the world’s great investment companies, the Vanguard Group. Most men in his situation would have levered such success into a multi-billion-dollar net worth; instead, he “mutualized” Vanguard, converting it, in effect, into a nonprofit organization whose only goal was to benefit its fund holders. From an ethical perspective, Vanguard is the only “investment company” worthy of that name. (As opposed to most financial firms, which are in fact “marketing companies” whose main purpose is to milk unwitting investors of fees and commissions.)

    The answer to the conundrum of 2008 lies in the book’s title, “Enough,” which is the punch line from a delightful Kurt Vonnegut/Joseph Heller story. Simply put, our nation has been suffering from decades of unchecked financial excess, for which we are now paying the piper: excess in investment company fees; excess in financial speculation masquerading as diversification and innovation; excess in the salaries of top executives; excess in salesmanship; and most importantly, excess in the role played by the financial industry in our national economy and national life.

    Each of these excesses gets its own chapter, and each one is a tightly written gem. Chapters 2 and 3, which dissect out the frenzy of derivatives, structured vehicles, and layers of intermediation behind the recent collapse, alone justify the book’s purchase price.

    As Bogle states in the book’s beginning, in the spring of 2007 the financial services sector–which, after all, produces nothing of substantive value–accounted for one-third of the earnings of the S&P 500. By the time you read this, this outsized influence will have shrunken drastically. Let Enough be your welcome to the brave new world; it will satisfy your curiosity, give you a sense of moral balance in this most materialistic of ages, and even plump up your investment portfolio.

    –William J. Bernstein


    Product Description

    Written by John C. Bogle–the legendary founder of the Vanguard Mutual Fund–Enough. offers his unparalleled insights on money, the values we should emulate in our business and professional callings, and what we should consider as the true treasures in our lives. Inspired in large measure by the hundreds of lectures Bogle has delivered to professional groups and college students in recent years, this book will help you discover what it really means to have “enough” and how close you are to really having it.

    Review
    “Why don’t people publish pamphlets any more. I’m not talking about the slim-jims handed out at trade shows, but rabble-rousing, world-changing works like Common Sense and The Communist Manifesto. John Bogle, the founder of Vanguard, follows in the footsteps of the great pamphleteers…‘Central to the effective functioning of capitalism,’ he writes, ‘was the fundamental principle of trusting and being trusted’—and that is disappearing. The problem now: No one is satisfied with having ‘enough’ money or enough success. … If pamphlets were still the rage, 48 pages distilled from the contents of this book could be something as powerful to our age as anything written by Thomas Paine or Marx and Engels. In our more bookish time, though, Bogle has fleshed his ideas out to an interesting, 266-page overview of his life and his views.”—Barron’s

    “’What have I created?’ [Bogle] asks in mock horror in his new book…his cry reflects a deeper personal dilemma, one that jags like a scar through this thoughtful meditation on the excess and greed that created the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. … I applaud his enthusiasm and don’t doubt his wisdom and sincerity. ‘Enough’ – with the period – is a worthy addition to the canon, a variation of his familiar sermon on thrift, simplicity, and the superiority of low-cost index funds.”—James Pressley, Bloomberg News

    “Jack Bogle’s passionate cry of Enough. contains a thought-provoking litany of life lessons regarding our individual roles in commerce and society. Employing a seamless mix of personal anecdotes, hard evidence, and all-too-often-underrated subjective admonitions, Bogle challenges each of us to aspire to become better members of our families, our professions, and our communities. Rarely do so few pages provoke so much thought. Read this book.” —David F. Swensen, Chief Investment Officer, Yale University

    “We live in a time that values achievement over character. When the two collide, character often takes a back seat and relationships of all kinds are shattered. Bogle observes that while the financial represents the worst of it, what we see today is not just a financial sector problem, but a societal problem. There is really just too much greed everywhere. … Enough is really about discovering what is really important in our lives. ” (Michael McKinney, LeadingBlog)

    “Bogle is a rarity - a true captain of industry who speaks about complex economic issues in a language comprehensible to the layperson.”(Michael Smerconish, The Philadelphia Enquirer)

    “Enough shines a light on Bogle’s sense of despair over the state of the financial industry, and perhaps industry in general. … From CEOs who implode their companies and float away on golden parachutes, to financial companies who create instruments so complex they themselves have trouble understanding them, to mutual fund companies that market rosy returns while sugarcoating their fees, Bogle sees a lack of integrity and a willingness to play fast and loose with ethical rules in order to make a buck. (Or, maybe more accurate, 150 billion bucks.)”(Justin McHenry, BlogCritics Magazine)

    “It’s hard to imagine a better time to publish a book that advocates moderation, balance and integrity in the business world. In this wise meditation, Bogle, the folk-hero creator of the first index mutual fund and founder of the Vanguard Mutual Fund Group, deplores ‘our worship of wealth and the growing corruption of our professional ethics but ultimately the subversion of our character and values.’ Directly in his sights: CEOs and hedge-fund managers who draw ‘obscene’ compensation. At this time of plunging portfolios, it is a relief to be told that ‘enough’ is within reach.”(TIME Magazine)

    “I will simply say that it is one of the best business books (’life’ books?) I have ever read, an easy All-time Top 10. And its timing is, well, read it yourself …”
    —Tom Peters

    “This is an impressive message from a distinguished businessman. It will challenge all decision makers to consider the sufficiency and direction of their lives and work. What do we mean by Enough? Enough of what? Enough for what purpose? Feast here and reflect.” —Robert F. Bruner, Dean and Charles C. Abbott Professor of Business Administration, Darden Graduate School of Business

    “From one ‘battler’ to another: Thank you for putting in one little book the premise for an active, long life. A primer for those who will abjure complacency and just wanting more, who’d rather focus on the joy of trying to move some ball downfield.” —Ira Millstein, Senior Partner, Weil Gotshal & Manges LLP

    “The balances one must create in investing, in running a business, and in life more generally are simply and clearly stated in Jack’s most recent book, Enough. Unfortunately there are not enough Jack Bogles around in today’s world of instant gratification. Enough. should be must reading for business students and corporate board members.” —David L. Sokol, Chairman, MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company

    “Although Enough. is presented in a small volume, John Bogle’s wisdom is writ large and profound. The messages are particularly meaningful as we all reel from the moral, economic and financial meltdown that confronts us today.—William H. Donaldson, Former Chairman, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

    “[an] engaging, highly readable new book on what went wrong in financial markets in recent years. In the growing canon of “what went wrong” books, Bogle’s offering holds a unique place. . . readers will value the common sense packed in these pages.” —Jared Bernstein, Philadelphia Inquirer

    Order Enough: True Measures of Money, Business, and Life: John C. Bogle form Amazon.

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  • The Math Behind Wall Street: How the Market Works and How to Make It Work for You: Nicholas Teebagy, Amir D. Aczel

    • Filed under: Recommended

    The Math Behind Wall Street: How the Market Works and How to Make It Work for You: Nicholas Teebagy, Amir D. Aczel

    Editorial Reviews

    By outlining and explaining the enigmatic terms and concepts used to track and ultimately determine stock movements, The Math Behind Wall Street: How the Market Works and How to Make it Work for You, by Bentley College mathematics professor Nicholas Teebagy, is designed to provide average investors with financial tools that usually are the province of professionals. Intimidated by the likes of ARCH/GARCH models and neural networks? Don’t be. Teebagy begins by describing the basics of probability and risk in order to clarify the way that uncertain future events are taken into account to form a well-reasoned investment analysis. In clear language, and with the welcome assistance of numerous charts and graphs, he then goes on to specify how all this can be used to calculate the potential performance of an entire portfolio. Lastly, he offers an introduction to advanced topics such as the aforementioned ARCH/GARCH models (for tracking periods of continued volatility) and neural networks (which attempt to imitate the way human brains process information). While not for the fiscally faint of heart, this short but information-packed volume will assist serious investors as they try to keep ahead of evolving market trends. –Howard Rothman

    In The Math Behind Wall Street, Nick Teebagy speaks intelligently to investors at all levels of experience. A mathematician, Teebagy begins by exploring key terms ranging from statistics and probability to covariance and correlation, and then connects them to the way the stock market actually works. The book builds on each lesson to reinforce general knowledge and prepare the reader for more challenging ideas. As investors increasingly understand how to deal with concepts such as uncertainty and standard deviations, the numbers become less intimidating and Wall Street loses its menace. This book can help investors and advisors make smart decisions and minimize their risk.

    Order The Math Behind Wall Street: How the Market Works and How to Make It Work for You: Nicholas Teebagy, Amir D. Aczel form Amazon.

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  • Money Wise: How to Create, Grow, and Preserve Your Wealth: A. Michael Lipper, Douglas R. Sease

    • Filed under: Recommended

    Money Wise: How to Create, Grow, and Preserve Your Wealth: A. Michael Lipper, Douglas R. Sease

    Editorial Reviews

    From Publishers Weekly
    Musings on the creation, preservation and use of wealth devolve into rambling in this personal finance guide from a seasoned Wall Street investor and inventor of the Lipper Averages for mutual funds. In his search for the eternal truths of creating wealth, Lipper addresses the needs of only the very wealthiest Americans, suggesting that investors hire a supermanager to watch over their regular advisers if they have more than three. Focusing on the emotional and psychological aspects of wealth management, Lipper broods upon the reasons why people invest, wealth psychology and the various investment personalities (absolute, confident, uncertain, relative, fiduciary, bored, guilty). In a book marked by a paucity of practical suggestions, readers will likely notice—and be dismayed by—the lack of research to support the author’s claims. While Lipper competently addresses the responsibilities of great wealth—including handling charitable donations and coming to grips with one’s own mortality through decisions regarding wills, trusts and heirs, the long-winded slog to get there is not worth the haul. (Sept.)
    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    Review
    From the “New York Times”
    THE appeal of “Money Wise” (St. Martin’s Press, $27.95), by A. Michael Lipper, doesn’t come from his investment picks. He doesn’t offer any.
    It certainly is not provided by Mr. Lipper’s counsel on which asset classes to buy. His position is this: It all depends.
    And after reading the book, you may not come away with new insights about how to select someone to help you manage your money, or about how to invest in general.
    When it comes to advisers, Mr. Lipper says, “I look for managers who can carefully rotate their portfolio weightings and selections over multiple periods.” As for where to put your money: “Never invest in something because it is fashionable.”
    You have probably heard views like that for years. So what makes this book by the founder of Lipper Analytical Services — now Lipper, a division of Reuters, which provides information on mutual fund performance — so worthwhile?
    It’s the unusual path he has chosen to follow. These days, most investment books are trying to make the not-so-rich rich, with titles like “The Automatic Guide to Making Money in the Coming Crash” (my concoction). But Mr. Lipper has taken a different approach, by not aiming at people who are trying to become wealthy. He has written this book, with the help of Douglas R. Sease, a former editor at The Wall Street Journal, for those who are already well off and want to stay that way.
    Such people are likely to find his straightforward and often unconventional advice extremely appealing. And so, too, might the rest of us, who can take advantage of at least some of the strategies that Mr. Lipper offers.
    Consider the approach he suggests for one of themost fundamental components of financial planning: figuring out your net worth.
    Typically, as part of this exercise, you are told to make a conservative guess of what your house would sell for today, deduct the mortgages against it, and add the difference to the asset side of your personal ledger.
    The problem with that, Mr. Lipper argues, is twofold: Few people can count on converting their house into cash quickly, so whatever equity they have is far from a liquid asset, especially these days. More to the point, if you sell your house you still need a place to live (unless, of course, it is a second home). That expense — a liability on the balance sheet — is usually not included in the statement of net worth.
    Not only do people overestimate their assets, Mr. Lipper argues, but they also underestimate their liabilities.
    “Do you intend to fund education expenses for your children, or grandchildren?” Mr. Lipper asks. “Is your health going to be perfect until you suddenly drop dead? Do you intend to travel, eat in fine restaurants, and engage in other lifestyle indulgences after you retire? They’re all liabilities on your personal balance sheet, and many of them are, like some of your assets, difficult to estimate. Yet it is important that you make the effort because your estimate of your liabilities drives the way in which you arrange your assets.”
    Other conventional wisdom when it comes to wealth is also misleading, he says.
    Yes, of course, you want to invest in good companies with strong fundamentals, but Mr. Lipper says that “one of the rules that I try to follow is not to make a serious investment if I cannot find someone who has been in the same room with theprincipals of the company under consideration and seen them under some pressure.”
    Mr. Lipper spends a great deal of time urging investors to be truly honest with themselves as they think both about their financial futures and their abilities.
    Three quick examples make the point:
    -”I know most people talk about cutting back on expenses when they retire, but they seldom make significant reductions.” His advice is to figure that once you quit work, you will continue to spend as you do now, and to plan accordingly.
    -”Most investors at one time or another in their lifetime try their hand at trading stocks or other financial instruments. If you pay attention to nothing else I have written, pay attention to this: Don’t trade with a lot of money.” You are not likely to be good at trading, he says, no matter how smart you think you are.
    -”The biggest mistake that I see people of wealth making is having a single-minded focus on investment returns with no thought about their spending patterns. At the end of the day, expense control plays a larger role in the success of a financial program than the entire array of specific investments.” His point is that you can certainly offset lower returns in the market, by living on less.
    HIS thoughts even extend to raising children.
    “If your child really wants an advanced degree in poetry,” he says, “consider that you might want to use the assets that would pay for the degree to instead set up a trust to help pay the cost of living until the child is economically independent.”
    One last point also makes the book stand out: his focus on constantly asking what kind of financial legacy you wish to leave.
    Competent estateattorneys can create your will and establish the necessary trusts, but it is up to you to decide whom or what you want to benefit.
    The result of all this is a book that may help you preserve whatever money you have and think carefully about what you want to do with it.
    –Paul R. Brown
    From The Seeker
    After many years of discussion with family, friends and colleagues, A. Michael Lipper, CFA, has written a book, “Money Wise: How to Create, Grow, and Preserve Your Wealth” (September 2008, St. Martin’s Press) with former “Wall Street Journal” Money and Markets Editor Douglas Sease. The book is a delight to read not only for what it tells you about investing per se but because it’s a witty tome about life’s lessons. By the way, these lessons apply to investing, too.
    Many clients of wealth managers will know the Lipper name, attached as it is to many mutual fund indices and fund performance statistics, often with the phrase, “according to Lipper.” Reuters bought Lipper’s data company, Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. in 1998, now known as Lipper, Inc. As president of Lipper Advisory Services, Inc., and Lipper Consulting Services, Inc., Mike Lipper continues to engage in his philanthropic endeavors, to manage money for a select group of wealthy individuals and institutional investors, and to consult with financial companies.
    Lipper is a member of the Board of Trustees of the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), which manages the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. In the book, he talks about what he’s learned in the course of getting to know the physicists and professors there, and the parallels between physics and investing.
    He sat down with “Wealth Manager’”s Editor in Chief, Kate McBride, at his home in New Jersey in early June. [Full disclosure: The writer has known Mike Lipper for the better part of two decades, and worked for him for many years.]
    In the book, you talk about science and the uncertainty of life, about change, and this ties in with your work with Caltech and the physicists there. How do you draw some of the parallels between physics and investing?
    It has to do with probability and certainty. In physics you hope to discover or use a law that is totally repeatable and that anyplace in the world, somebody else can repeat it and get the same result not only today but forever. We know now [that] some of the past scientific laws weren’t forever, but you’re looking for [the ability to reproduce results] 100 percent of the time.
    In investing, a good investor wins, in terms of dollar impact, something more than 50 percent of the time. A professional should win 60 percent and a great investor 67 percent-two-thirds of the time. You can look at Buffett, Soros, Neff, Peter Lynch. When you talk with any of them privately, they talk about the fish that got away, so while searching for investment truths we have to learn to deal with investment odds. The odds on totally replicating the past [are not good]; it’s the ability to absorb error that is the way to stay in the game long enough for when things come right. The big tragedy of declines is that people sell out and say, “Never again,” and they miss the upsides, and historically, in this country the upsides have been bigger than the downsides.
    What got you interested in doing the work that you’re doing with Caltech in the first place?
    Like with almost everything in my life, it was accidental-I had heard of the school but really didn’t know it. A neighbor and good friend is a graduate, bachelor’s, master’s and doctorate and invited [my wife] and I to attend what they call Caltech Associates Dinners where they bring in professors to talk about what they’re doing, and we were fascinated-[it's] a whole different world than what I was used to-even though I was at one point an electronics analyst. This stuff was way above anything that I knew anything about, and I was impressed. I can go in there and learn something from very smart people-a lot of what I’ve learned is not immediately applicable. It’s a different point of view; that they are the manager of the Jet Propulsion Lab opens up the concept of space and how a tiny error here on earth means that you miss a planet by zillions.
    The stuff they’re doing in neuroeconomics is fascinating. The theory is that they can identify the portions of the brain that make decisions-and quite probably economic decisions. Whether those are investment decisions, more work’s got to be done. They have a game theory group-fascinating work. Bottom line, [they're] just a bunch of very bright people, and it happened at the right time in my life.
    Are you applying anything that you’ve learned there to your own firm or investments?
    Yes and no. Yes in the sense that a good investment program would have significant investments in the progress ofsc

    Order Money Wise: How to Create, Grow, and Preserve Your Wealth: A. Michael Lipper, Douglas R. Sease form Amazon.

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  • The Big Money: Seven Steps to Picking Great Stocks and Finding Financial Security: Frederick R. Kobrick

    • Filed under: Recommended

    The Big Money: Seven Steps to Picking Great Stocks and Finding Financial Security: Frederick R. Kobrick

    Editorial Reviews

    Review
    “In “The Big Money,” Frederick Kobrick’s confidence and insight, honed from more than three decades as a leading mutual fund manager and investor, make his stories worth a good listen. . . . His results speak for themselves.”

    – Kerry Hannon, “USA Today”

    Review
    “One of the best stock pickers I have ever met. . . .This book breaks new ground and will help investors improve their skills.”

    – Peter Lynch

    “One of the great masters of the market, Fred Kobrick, offers up the lessons of a lifetime.”

    – Henry Scammell, Equities

    “In The Big Money, Frederick Kobrick’s confidence and insight, honed from more than three decades as a leading mutual fund manager and investor, make his stories worth a good listen. . . . His results speak for themselves.”

    – Kerry Hannon, USA Today

    Order The Big Money: Seven Steps to Picking Great Stocks and Finding Financial Security: Frederick R. Kobrick form Amazon.

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  • For The Love Of Money: The 411 To Taking Control Of Your Taxes and Building Your Net Worth: Shannon K Nash

    • Filed under: Recommended

    For The Love Of Money: The 411 To Taking Control Of Your Taxes and Building Your Net Worth: Shannon K Nash

    Editorial Reviews

    Saving for retirement? Need more deductions? Ready to start your side business? No worries—For The Love Of Money has your back! Learn these all-important financial lessons while grooving to the popular songs that inspire the focus of each informative chapter.

    For The Love Of Money gives you the 411 to taking control of your taxes and building your net worth. Get the lowdown on:

    • The nuts and bolts of Form 1040
    • Organizing and operating your side business
    • Capital gains strategies to help you build wealth
    • Making the most of your itemized deductions
    • Alternative minimum taxes that can creep up
    • Saving for education and retirement
    • Relaxation techniques for an IRS audit
    • The all-star frequently asked tax questions

    Author Shannon King Nash, Esq, CPA, brings close to fifteen years of experience in teaching these lessons in an entertaining and light-hearted manner. Nash calls her style “business explained through music.” Each chapter gives you “more bounce to the ounce” and is jam-packed with musical examples to help keep you “hangin’ on.”

    As an added bonus, check-out the “Top Ten Tips” for folks like: Parents, Landlords, Newlyweds, Freelancers, Homeowners, Self-employed, Doctors, Lawyers, Stylists, Charities, Blessed Folks, Entertainers, New Money and much, much, more.

    About the Author
    Shannon King Nash, Esq, CPA, is also the author of Vault Guide to Tax Law Careers, and Helping the Non-Profit Client. Her entertaining financial empowerment and education seminars inspire many. Shannon and her husband have two children, and she enjoys helping non-profits and advocating for children with disabilities.

    Order For The Love Of Money: The 411 To Taking Control Of Your Taxes and Building Your Net Worth: Shannon K Nash form Amazon.

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  • Lombard Street: a description of the money market: Walter Bagehot

    • Filed under: Recommended

    Lombard Street: a description of the money market: Walter Bagehot

    Editorial Reviews

    Short excerpt: I maintain that the Money Market is as concrete and real as anything else; that it can be described in as plain words; that it is the writer’s fault if what he says is not clear.

    Order Lombard Street: a description of the money market: Walter Bagehot form Amazon.

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  • The Millionaire in You: Ten Things You Need to Do Now to Have Money and Time to Enjoy It: Michael Phd Leboeuf

    • Filed under: Recommended

    The Millionaire in You: Ten Things You Need to Do Now to Have Money and Time to Enjoy It: Michael Phd Leboeuf

    Editorial Reviews

    Who wants to be a millionaire? Virtually everyone, if that traditional mark of wealth actually represents what we truly need for financial freedom. Michael LeBoeuf’s The Millionaire in You outlines a three-pronged plan for amassing and retaining those necessary resources by expressly defining where we want to go and consciously striving to get there. LeBoeuf, a former business professor who retired at 47, has also written several books on working smarter and more creatively. Here he turns some of those principles into suggestions for avoiding the “time/money trap” that often keeps us tied to financially limiting employment, and initiating habits that instead allow us to do what we really want. The foundation is simple (”invest your time actively and your money passively”), as are recommendations to put accumulated savings exclusively into no-fee, lower-risk index funds that match individual asset allocations. The core, however, involves 10 strategic choices for really making those dreams come true. Among them: set goals for career, family, relationships, etc.; improve odds with smart life choices; maximize savings by minimizing expenses; build personal market value; and take advantage of windfalls. LeBoeuf concludes with ways to sustain financial independence and enjoy it more by maintaining physical and mental health and giving back to the community. –Howard Rothman

    Wouldn’t it be great to have the financial freedom to do whatever you want? Wouldn’t it be better if you could also have the time to do it?

    Most of us would answer a resounding yes to those questions. For many people, the goal of making money is not the accumulation of wealth for wealth’s sake; instead, the goal is to have enough money to do the things we’re passionate about. But very few people have a lot of money and the time to enjoy it.

    Michael LeBoeuf knows how to obtain both—and he wants to teach you. LeBoeuf shows that there are only four things people need to know about money: how to make it, how to save it, how to invest it, and how to enjoy it. But most people never figure out how to do all four, although almost anyone can. The key to doing so lies in applying a simple principle called LeBoeuf’s Law: Invest your time actively and your money passively. Based on LeBoeuf’s Law, The Millionaire in You offers ten strategic choices designed to maximize your time and money:
    * Live the life you want instead of the life others expect.
    * Stack the odds in your favor instead of against you.
    * Be a supersaver instead of a big spender.
    * Increase the market value of your time instead of working long hours.
    * Do less better instead of trying to do it all.
    * Capitalize on the unexpected instead of being derailed by it.
    * Own the market instead of trying to beat the market.
    * Limit your losses instead of letting bad luck ruin you.
    * Listen to those who know instead of those who sell.
    * Do it now instead of regretting it later.

    LeBoeuf is living proof that this strategy can work. He is a former business professor who retired in 1989 at the age of forty-seven and is living off of his accumulated wealth. He didn’t inherit a dime, and he
    didn’t get serious about achieving financial freedom until he was thirty-five. This book is intended to help you do what he’s done before you’re too old to enjoy the money you’ve earned or invested.

    Order The Millionaire in You: Ten Things You Need to Do Now to Have Money and Time to Enjoy It: Michael Phd Leboeuf form Amazon.

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  • Does Your Broker Owe You Money?: Daniel R. Solin

    • Filed under: Recommended

    Does Your Broker Owe You Money?: Daniel R. Solin

    Editorial Reviews

    Shows investors the various forms of broker fraud, and helps them determine if they have a claim. Gives you the tools to assess if you have a claim and advised you what your next steps should be. Softcover.

    About the Author
    Daniel R. Solin is a leading securities arbitration lawyer and a principal in Academic Wealth Management, LLP, a Registered Investment Advisor (academicwealth.com). Formerly the host of his own financial cable television show in Southwest Florida, he is a much sought after speaker.
    –This text refers to the

    Paperback
    edition.

    Order Does Your Broker Owe You Money?: Daniel R. Solin form Amazon.

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