Peter Lynch’s classic One Up on Wall Street was published in 1989. I bet it left a mark on anyone bit by the investing bug in the 1990s.
The downside of classics like Lynch’s books is how easy it is for new impressionable investors to overlook what’s important when you don’t know what’s important. When I first read it, I’m fairly sure the only lesson I walked away with was “find multi-baggers.” Easy enough. (It wasn’t!)
It’s almost like you have to read the classics three or four times before all the lessons sink in. And maybe add a few years of investing in the markets for good measure too.
I recently dug up my old copy. There was no marginalia (not a good sign) — only some folded page corners. Turns out, I missed a lot but the important lessons were there.
In fact, Lynch ends each of the three sections with this: “If you take away anything from this section…I hope you’ll remember the following.” Then he rattled up off a list.
A selection of his summations are below: Continue Reading…

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The last time we saw numbers anywhere close to that was March 2020 and, prior to that, the 2008 financial crisis (there’s no guarantee it reaches those heights). The point stands that a portion of the market has been hit hard over the past year.
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