Novel Investor
  • Home
  • About
  • Invest with Me
  • Resources
  • Weekend Reads – 2/6/26

    February 6, 2026

    ·

    Jon

    Quote for the Week

    The much wider fluctuations in investment common stocks that have come about since World War I have made it practically impossible for buyers of common stocks to disregard price changes. It would be extremely unwise — and hypocritical — for anybody to buy a list of common stocks and say that he was interested only in his dividend return and cared nothing at all about price changes.

    The problem is not whether price changes should be disregarded — because clearly they should not be — but rather in what way can the investor and the security analyst deal intelligently with the price changes which take place…

    The fact that investors have been willing to pay so much for so-called quality, and so much for so-called future prospects, on the average, that they have themselves introduced serious speculative elements into common stock valuations. These elements are bound to create fluctuations in their own attitude, because quality and prospects are psychological factors. The dividend, of course, is not a psychological factor; it is more or less of a fixed datum. Matters of the former kind — I am speaking now of prospects and quality — are subject to wide changes in the psychological attitude of the people who buy and sell stocks. — Ben Graham (source)

    Continue Reading…

  • A Week in Wall Street by Frederick Jackson

    February 4, 2026

    ·

    Buy the Book: eBook

    Published four years after the Panic of 1837, the author’s often satirical view of Wall Street describes the stock manipulations and other typical workings of Wall Street from the bubble years through the panic.

    "A Week in Wall Street" book cover

    The Notes

    Continue Reading…

  • Weekend Reads – 1/30/26

    January 30, 2026

    ·

    Jon

    Quote for the Week

    Perhaps enough has been said to indicate the principal difficulties which beset the speculator who attempts to profit by the short swings of the stock. For practical purposes the occurrence of ripples and waves in the price movement is unpredictable. To attempt to trade on such movements is mere gambling with the odds against the trader by a considerable margin. It is astounding that thousands of otherwise intelligent persons persist in trying to make money in this way. Commonly accepted figures of somewhat dubious origin are frequently cited to show that 90% to 95% of all margin trades lose money in the stock market. The deep-seated gambling instinct, the well-founded belief that in widely fluctuating markets there must be opportunities for profit nevertheless bring fresh recruits to the brokerage offices in constant streams. A few of them ultimately learn the methods by which money may actually be made in the stock market. — Philip Carret (source)

    Continue Reading…

  • How to Win in Wall Street by A Successful Operator

    January 28, 2026

    ·

    Buy the Book: eBook

    Published in 1881, How to Win in Wall Street offers some historical context around U.S. financial markets, and the enduring role human nature plays within it, alongside timeless investing wisdom.

    How to Win in Wall Street book cover

    The Notes

    Continue Reading…

  • Weekend Reads – 1/23/26

    January 23, 2026

    ·

    Jon

    Quote for the Week

    We actually can see and indeed measure how badly investors do at timing. They’re their own worst enemy. As Warren Buffett says, the two greatest enemies of equity investors are expenses and emotions. You can see the expenses in the gap between the market return and fund returns, and the emotions in the gap between fund returns and investor returns. When you look at data on the origin of these shortfalls, it is staggeringly loaded toward the degree of fund specialization; in other words, the biggest gap between fund time-weighted returns and fund investor dollar-weighted returns is found in technology funds, telecommunications funds, aggressive growth funds. We did a study that covered six years, i.e., the last three years of the up market and the first three years of the down market. With the ups and downs taken together, the twenty-five largest sector funds actually returned about 5.5 percent per year, versus 3.7 percent for the twenty-five largest diversified funds. However, while the typical investor in the diversified mutual funds ran about 2 percent behind the funds themselves, the investors in these specialty funds fell short of the fund returns by about 14 percent a year, which, when compounded over six years, is a staggering shortfall of 59 percent. — John Bogle (source)

    Continue Reading…

  • Quarterly Reading – Winter 2026

    January 21, 2026

    ·

    Jon

    Here’s what I’ve been reading for the past three months:

    • How to Win in Wall Street – George Goodman referenced this book in his classic The Money Game. Published in 1881, the author mixes in stories related to the period to discuss investing basics, warn about gambling, the need for patience, and more. He offers 9 rules to “win in wall street.” Most should sound familiar today.
    • A Week in Wall Street – An even older book, written in 1841. It takes a humorous, almost cynical, look at the inner workings of the early days of Wall Street.
    • The Great Salad Oil Swindle – Norman Miller tells the crazy story of Tino De Angelis and one of the largest cases of financial fraud in the 1900s. It involved vegetable oil, loans to buy vegetable oil futures, and an “inventory” of oil, used as collateral, that exceeded the total supply of vegetable oil in the U.S. Those that follow Warren Buffett’s early investments might recognize this story. The aftermath led to Buffett buying American Express.
    • Hedgemanship – The book is a byproduct of the rise of hedge funds in the 1960s. It explains hedge fund strategies that individual investors might employ. In turn, you get a history of hedge funds by Alfred Winslow Jones and others.

    Book notes from last quarter:

    • The Pleasure was All Mine by Fred Schwed Jr.
    Continue Reading…

1 2 3 … 230
Next Page

Join the library.

Access over 1,100 research papers, writings, transcripts, and more from the brightest minds in finance.

Learn More

Learning

  • Investor Library
  • Book Notes
  • Investor Quotes

Return Quilts

  • Asset Class Returns
  • S&P Sector Returns
  • International Stock Market Returns
  • Emerging Markets Returns
  • Historical Returns Data

Connect

  • Bluesky
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • RSS Feed
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact

© Novel Investor · All Rights Reserved · Terms of Use · Privacy Policy · Disclaimer