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The Intelligent Investor

The Intelligent Investor

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Author: Benjamin Graham
Publisher: HarperCollins
Category: Book

List Price: £12.99
Buy New: £7.14
You Save: £5.85 (45%)



New (34) Used (16) from £6.43

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 13 reviews
Sales Rank: 563

Media: Paperback
Edition: Revised edition
Pages: 640
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.3 x 1.6

ISBN: 0060555661
Dewey Decimal Number: 332.678
EAN: 9780060555665
ASIN: 0060555661

Publication Date: October 23, 2003
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

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Customer Reviews:   Read 8 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Invest In This Book, Invest In Yourself   September 24, 2006
a reviewer
15 out of 15 found this review helpful

With more than one million copies sold and an endorsement on the cover by Warren Buffet, you know there has to be something to this book- and I think I know why. Simply because it is the first book ever to describe the emotional framework and analytical tools necessary for financial success for individual investors.

Probably the single best book on investing written for the lay-public and the stock market bible since its first appearance in 1949, it's a great resource, although it's quite a thick book and filled with detail- and probably not for anybody but the serious stock market investor. And if getting motivated to start investing is your problem, suggest The Sixty-Second Motivator. Good luck!




5 out of 5 stars Small Cap Value Stocks Lead the US Market through 2004   July 30, 2004
Donald Mitchell (Boston)
53 out of 67 found this review helpful

The Intelligent Investor effectively introduces the idea of examining a company's stock as though you might buy the whole company. This is the way that potential acquirers of the company will look at it. If it looks like a good buy as an acquisition, you have the added edge of a potential buy out to help buoy your stocks.

With so many stocks beaten down over the last few years, this is a good time to think about value investing. Also, remember that you can buy value investing indexed mutual funds now. And these have done well through 2004, especially the ones that focus on small capitalization stocks.

In March 2000, many people considered value investing about as useful as high-button shoes. If they had thought about value investing, they would have had another measure of how overpriced the market was. As a result, losses could have been avoided.

On the other hand, value investing will make you money more often than momentum investing will over the years. Long-term studies have shown that small cap value stocks beat the S&P 500 over time.

So even if this does not seem like this approach is right for you, you should learn more before rejecting this alternative.

Here's another reason why: Almost all stocks will be volatile relative to their average p/e, price/cash flow, or price/revenue ratio. By paying attention to this volatility, you can learn a lot about when to buy and sell a given stock. Astute traders based on value principles can also use options to lock in even larger profits, taking the normal ebb and flow of valuation into account.

Those who envy Warren Buffett's track record should understand these principles as well, because these ideas are the basis for some of the Buffett investing style. He later added a perspective on stock markets and human psychology that Graham did not have: Brand names which are attached to quality products and services will tend to outperform the market, especially when they have the potential to expand their geographical distribution around the world and to add new products.

Another benefit of understanding the lessons in this book is to help you know when value investors will probably want to start buying a "beaten down" stock, which will often mark the beginning of the stock's turnaround.

You will look in vain for a better book on value investing, and understanding this subject is like going to Driver's Education when you are learning to drive. It is an important groundwork for being a safe investor.

The most important concept you will ever learn as an investor is that avoiding losses is more important than making gains. It is too hard to make up for the losses, so make more careful buys in the first place and be prepared to leave before your precious capital is dissipated.

If you are a new investor, another lesson for you will be the need to establish a discipline to how you invest. This book will give you a good sense of how that can be done.

Otherwise, the stock market can be an expensive form of gambling. Please do buy, read, think about, and use the insights of this book to create more value for yourself and those you care about. We will all be richer if you do.

After you have finished enjoying this book, I suggest that you also think about where else in your life you should be careful not to make big mistakes. How about in your relationships?

May your wealth compound safely and intelligently for you!


5 out of 5 stars Excellent book to start investing with   May 1, 2006
Mr. M. Shanker (ireland)
17 out of 22 found this review helpful

This book is now re-edited by jason zweig- the message still comes through clearly-there is no easy money anywhere. It takes time and a clear plan to succeed. Let me tell you a small secret and the synposis of the entire book- buy index funds that are cheap as possible( ones with no entry or exit load and with very little maintainence fees). In time they will pay you rich dividends as warren buffet says.
If however you want to do your own research then the book you need to get is security analysis by graham, but let me warn you it is not light reading and a level of knowledge of stocks is neccasary. Maybe someone will edit that as well making it easier for the novice investor.



5 out of 5 stars Definitive guide to value investing   September 10, 2006
Spider Monkey (UK)
9 out of 12 found this review helpful

This is probably the best place to start if you are interested in value investing. Although the latest revision by Graham was in the seventies, Jazon Zweig adds commentaries to each chapter to bring the information right up to date. The principles of investment are sound and the style of writing is very accessible. This is a classic investment book and should be read by most people planning for their financial future. Highly recommended.


5 out of 5 stars Lives up to the hype   June 7, 2007
dilaudid (London)
9 out of 12 found this review helpful

Most investors seem to have heard of this book - many refer to it as the bible of value investing. I think that the esteem that it is held in is probably counter productive (Barton Biggs, hedge fund manager, talks about being asked to read and annotate it twice as a young man), but what impressed me is that it is a very simple readable book that explains how to invest long term, to maximise wealth.

I don't think that Zweig's commentary adds much - I would pay more for a version with it excised - it provides interesting detail on what Graham may have considered important which is great, but it also provides a lot of anecdotal evidence which could be misleading. It also triples the length and provides a lot of distraction.


 

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