William Green draws from the greatest investors to teach not only the lessons of their investment success but how those lessons crossover into how we make decisions in other areas of our lives.
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William Green draws from the greatest investors to teach not only the lessons of their investment success but how those lessons crossover into how we make decisions in other areas of our lives.
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Major market indexes generally do a good job of tracking “the market” but they don’t always tell the whole story.
For example, if you only keep track of the S&P 500, you’re probably oblivious to the increasing number of U.S. listed stocks that have declined 50% or more from their 52-week highs. As the chart below shows, that number currently exceeds 2,000.
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. Continue Reading…
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Thomas Gibson’s 1906 classic is the result of studying thousands of speculative accounts over a ten-year period. It sits as a timeless warning on the numerous mistakes investors make in the stock market.
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Here’s what I’ve been reading the past three months:
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Buy the Book: Print
My Own Story is the first volume of the autobiography of Bernard Baruch. Known as the Lone Wolf, Baruch amassed a fortune on Wall Street as a speculator and dealmaker, and later, as a lone investor before entering the public life managing the economic mobilization of WWI and advisor to presidents.