Here’s what I’ve been reading for the past three months:
- Hedgemanship – The early success of hedge funds run by Alfred Winslow Jones and others, brought about copycats and increased interest. This book covers that early success and presents under the guise that you too can invest like a hedge fund without hiring a hedge fund manager. However, the author points out that even some hedge fund managers are not great at being hedge fund managers, so it’s not quite as easy he makes it sound.
- Stocks and Stock-Jobbing in Wall Street – This brief pamphlet sits as guide to the market back in 1848. The author, “a reformed stock gambler,” offers the ins and outs of Wall Street including a warning about “fancy stocks” — the hot stocks of the day — that traded at ridiculous multiples but had little to no value.
- The Essence of a Family Enterprise – This book is a collection of essays reflecting on the S.C. Johnson & Son’s 100th anniversary in 1986. It outlines the principles and philosophies that made this family-owned business such a success.
- Fifty Years of Wall Street with Anecdotiana – Dean Mathey worked in Wall Street following a brief tennis career and chaired Princeton’s investment committee starting in the late 1920s for 34 years. I was lucky enough to find a rare copy of this, his autobiography. He covers the period from 1912 to the early 1960s. Though, notably, his focus is the first half of the 50-year period.
- New Levels in the Stock Market – Among those who believed the market cycle was obsolete in the late 1920s was Charles Amos Dice. He was a professor at Ohio State University and published this book in 1929. The NY Times even gave it a nice writeup two weeks before the crash. According to J.K. Galbraith, Dice had complete faith in the “new era” economy. Galbraith’s mention drove me to dig it up and I’ll have more once I finish reading.
