Stock-market


Related Subjects: Money Book Review Common-stock Dividend Dow-Jones-Industrial-Average Equity-investment Financial-reports-and-statements Fundamental-analysis Growth-stock Income-per-share List-of-stock-exchanges Market-capitalization Nasdaq Preferred-stock Private-Equity Stock Stock-market-bubble Stock-market-crash Stock-split Stock-valuation Technical-analysis Treasury-stock V-trend economic-value-added mergers-and-acquisitions
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Book reviews for "Stock-market" sorted by average review score:

The common sense way to stock market profits (A Signet book)
Published in Unknown Binding by New American Library (1978)
Author: Claude N Rosenberg
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The Cold War in Welfare: Stock Markets versus Pensions
Published in Hardcover by Verso (31 May, 2001)
Author: Richard Minns
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The City: Inside the Great Expectation Machine : Myth and Reality in Institutional Investment and the Stock Market
Published in Paperback by Trans-Atlantic Pubns (01 February, 2003)
Author: Tony Golding
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Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Amazon base price: $9.95
List price: $18.95 (that's 47% off!)
Average review score:

quite a few nuggets, but impractical at times
when "scuttlebutt" is one of the leading litmus tests before investing, you're dealing w/ a program that is impractical for average individual investors. but the book is quite valuable for its focus on long run investing, its 15 rules for investors (and moreso, the rules for investors to NOT follow), and its stress on conservatism in practice is very helpful.

ultimately, this book is less about security selection than it is in investing philosophy---which it excels at. that's why buffett loved it, and you may too.

Solid read; practical ideas
This book is a classic in the investment field. Fisher is acknowledged as one of Warren Buffet's intellectual fathers and it shows. However - like many books on Buffett - Fisher's approach relies on the ability of the individual to spend large amounts of time researching companies and stocks. While this minimizes the risk of investing badly, it also assumes that picking stocks is your life. I recommend that anyone interested in investing read this text as an example of how to think about companies in which to invest. However, be prepared that it won't be as directly usuable as, say, the writings of Peter Lynch.

Easy to read book, some advice not practical
Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits is one of the classic investment texts written for the lay person.

Rather than just seeking value, Fisher realized that even a greatly "undervalued" company could prove a horrible investment. Sure, you might occasionally buy a stock for less than the company's cash-in-the-bank (back then, at least!). But what if the business is horribly run? It might not take long for the company to lose all that cash!

Even if the company returns to "fair" value, that ends the potential profit from investing in such a business. Holding an average company, because it was once undervalued, but is no more, makes little sense.

Fisher points out that the largest wealth via investing has been made in one of two ways. First, buying stocks when the markets crash and holding them until the markets recover. Secondly, with less risk and more potential return, you can also just invest in a small portfolio of companies which continue to strongly grow sales and earnings over the years. Then, if the company was correctly selected, you might never have to sell, while accruing a huge return on your initial investment.

Fisher pioneered the school of growth stock investing. In Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits, Fisher explains how he selects a growth company. He lists fifteen points which a company must have to be considered a superior investment.

Fisher's first point seems obvious: "Does the company have products or services with sufficient market potential to make possible a sizeable increase in sales for at least several years?"

Fisher shows that some companies might have potential substantial sales increases for only a few years, but after that have limited potential due to some factor, such as market saturation. For example, Fisher mentions the growth in sales of TV's until the U.S. market was saturated.

He also wisely suggests looking behind the products to seek other superior investments. While many TV manufacturers were competitive and it was difficult to tell which was best, Fisher points out that Corning Glass Works was, by far, the company most capable of producing the glass bulbs used in TVs.

Fisher tries to clearly distinguish between companies which are "fortunate and able" and those which are "fortunate because they are able." The second kind, the superior investments, are highly innovative and create new products which have growth potential. Fisher uses Dow Chemical as one example of a "fortunate because they are able" company.

The second point wants to know if management has the drive to innovate new products. A man ahead of his time, Fisher wonders about how much of a company's future sales might come from products not yet invented.

A constant theme of Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits is examining what the company is doing to prepare for the future. Is the company spending wisely on Research and Development? Or, is the company just trying to maximize its current profit and reinvesting nothing for future growth?

Fisher explains why answering that question is difficult in practice. What different companies account for under R&D is one problem. Another is that some companies are more successful than others at turning money spent on R&D into future marketable products. Today, we must assume this question is far more difficult to answer!

In addition to questioning a company's R&D, Fisher wants to see a company with a strong sales organization and distribution efficiency. "It is the making of a sale that is the most basic single activity of any business," he writes.

Yet, why don't investors focus upon such key factors instrumental to a company's future growth? Fisher points out that certain issues are not quantifiable. That is why many investors tend to focus upon financial issues which can be expressed in a simple ratio.

How does the investor go about answering the "unquantifiable"? How does the investor know how well-managed the company is? Or, how does one evaluate the people factors, which Fisher says are the real strength of a superior growth company?

Fisher suggests the "scuttlebutt" method. This involves talking to suppliers, customers, company employees, and people knowledgeable in the industry, and, eventually, company management. From this information, an investor can get a good feel for the quality of the company as a growth investment. Fisher teaches us how to learn to ask the correct, company-specific questions.

Fisher acknowledges the "scuttlebutt" method is a lot of work. But, he asks, should it be easy to find such great companies, when finding only a few can easily lay the foundation for building huge future wealth?

I tend to think the average individual investor will not use the "scuttlebutt" method. And, for most investors and most companies, even if the investor had the desire to use this method, it would not be practical.

Yet, for investors seeking to make investments in smaller, local companies, the "scuttlebutt" method might be of value. For angel investors or mini-venture capitalists, reading "Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits" is probably also worthwhile.

The book also has some excellent thoughts about buying-and-holding a stock and when to sell a stock. Fisher's thoughts on diversification are also well worth reading, although I would recommend more diversification than Fisher claims is adequate.

Overall, this is a great book for the individual investor. You will not be able to follow the "scuttlebutt" method in practice, for most investments, and, maybe, the complexity of today's companies and scientific research in many growth companies make Fisher's method less practical today than in the past, but there is much to learn about business and investing from this book.

Peter Hupalo, Author of "Becoming An Investor: Building Wealth By Investing In Stocks, Bonds, And Mutual Funds"


Common Cents Stock Pricing Act of 1997: Hearings Before the Committee on Commerce, U.S. House of Representatives
Published in Paperback by Diane Pub. (1997)
Author: Michael G. Oxley
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Commercial Banking & the Stock Market Before 1863
Published in Hardcover by AMS Press ()
Author: Joseph E. Heges
Amazon base price: $37.50

Coming Back on Wall Street: Book II : A Stock Market Trilogy (Stock Market Trilogy)
Published in Paperback by Fraser Pub. Co. (01 June, 1986)
Author: Horatio Alger
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CliffsNotes(tm) Investing in the Stock Market For Canadians
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Not Avail (07 January, 2000)
Authors: Marguerite Pigeon and C. Edward Gilpatric
Amazon base price: $8.99
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CliffsNotes Investing in the Stock Market
Published in Unknown Binding by Cliffs Notes (07 March, 2001)
Author: C. Edward Gilpatric
Amazon base price: $8.99
Average review score:

Do You Really Want To Take the Shortcut?
If you're like me, then you are embarrassed to even be considering buying Cliffs Notes for Investors. Although the booklet uses simple, easy to understand language and covers several basic investment strategies, nothing can take the place of real research and true understanding. That will come from experience and extensive study. This book's main purpose could be to impress your friends with some newfound lingo.

A baby step in the right direction
Let's face facts: this book will not turn you into a savvy investor any more than reading the Cliff Notes on Macbeth will make you a scholar of English literature. The back cover claims the book will help you "master the essentials" of Wall Street, and this is only a slight boast - it will introduce you to the fundamentals with brevity and clarity, then point you toward more information in print and on the web. To that end, the book is certainly a good investment.


Clearance and settlement reform the stock, options, and futures markets are still at risk : report to congressional committees (SuDoc GA 1.13:GGD-90-33)
Published in Unknown Binding by The Office U.S. General Accounting Office [distributor ()
Author: U.S. General Accounting Office
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Related Subjects: Money Book Review Common-stock Dividend Dow-Jones-Industrial-Average Equity-investment Financial-reports-and-statements Fundamental-analysis Growth-stock Income-per-share List-of-stock-exchanges Market-capitalization Nasdaq Preferred-stock Private-Equity Stock Stock-market-bubble Stock-market-crash Stock-split Stock-valuation Technical-analysis Treasury-stock V-trend economic-value-added mergers-and-acquisitions
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