Novel Investor
  • Home
  • About
  • Invest with Me
  • Resources
  • The First Million the Hardest: An Autobiography by Arthur B. Farquhar

    June 5, 2024

    ·

    "First Million is the Hardest" book coverBuy the Book: eBook

    Arthur Farquhar rose from apprentice to partner to sole owner of a global agricultural company in the 19th century. His autobiography tells the story of business and life during the Civil War through 1921.

    The Notes

    Continue Reading…


  • Weekend Reads – 5/24/24

    May 24, 2024

    ·

    Jon

    Quote for the Week

    As an investor, you have to deal with two risks: The risk of losing money, and the risk of missing out on opportunities. It’s the job of a good investor to balance the two… I think it’s better to turn cautious too soon rather than too late… It’s precisely when people can’t see what it is that could make things turn down that risk is the highest. It could be an economic slowdown, rising interest rates, the effect of central bank tightening, or geopolitical events. Or it could be “something else.” It’s always the things we don’t know about that really bite us in the end. — Howard Marks (source)

    Continue Reading…


  • The Greatest Minds and Ideas of All Time by Will Durant

    May 22, 2024

    ·

    "The Greatest Minds and Ideas of All Time" book coverBuy the Book: Print | eBook

    This book is a compilation of Will Durant’s essays and lectures. His personal lists of the greatest thinkers, poets, books, peaks of human progress, and dates offer a journey through world history.

    The Notes

    Continue Reading…


  • Weekend Reads – 5/17/24

    May 17, 2024

    ·

    Jon

    Quote for the Week

    Stevenson, you remember, had a coward in his “Suicide Club” who threw dice with Death to enjoy the delights of fear, because when he escaped he tasted the intense joys of living. But he played once too often, did old Mr. Malthus. It is the same in stock gambling — the delightful uncertainty; the grim “now you see and now you don’t” of luck; the little chills of pleasure and the leaden sinking of disappointment; the exquisite expectancy — all this fires the blood of the young, as does love, and of the old, as love no longer can. The stock market “lambs” are like Mr. Malthus — when prices fluctuate they keenly enjoy the delight of riches because they have just jumped from the sorrow of nonpossession. But they too play once too often!

    It may be accepted as axiomatically true that a man must possess a high degree of intelligence to be successful in commercial or professional pursuits. So must a Wall Street man, to win a fortune in the stock market and to keep it. But for an “outside” businessman to make a fortune in his vocation, and then to make another in the stock market, and keep both, requires positively the most extraordinary ability. Always on the wave of a general boom, outsiders come to Wall Street — and fail to display ordinary ability. They are ignorant of the basic principles of stock speculation. They are too late in going in and they overstay. They take unduly great risks. — Edwin Lefevre (source)

    Continue Reading…


  • Wise Words from Jim Simons

    May 15, 2024

    ·

    Jon

    Jim Simons had a natural curiosity for math. Once, he couldn’t understand why his dad needed to stop the car for gas.

    “You don’t have to run out of gas,” he told his father, “You can use half of what you have, and then you can use half of that and then half of that, and you’ll never run out of gas.”

    Even at an early age, he knew slicing something in half multiple times over never quite gets you to zero. Of course, the car never gets you anywhere but there’s always some gas left.

    Simons’s math abilities led him to MIT, graduating in three years. He stayed for graduate studies. He crossed the country to Berkley for a doctorate, which led to the Veblen Prize in Geometry in 1976. Yet, despite the math awards, he’s most recognized for his success on Wall Street.

    Simons caught the investing bug in college. A trip to Bogota with two college friends led to an investment in a company that made vinyl floor tiles. His share was 10%. The outlook was promising. The results: less so. Until the company pivoted to making pipes. Sales took off. The group sold half the business and Simons was sitting on a small fortune.

    The question was what to do with money? He reached out to an old math friend, now a commodity trader, who put the money to work. Nine months later, thanks to a spike in sugar prices, he had made ten times their money. Simons called it a fluke. Continue Reading…


  • Weekend Reads – 5/10/24

    May 10, 2024

    ·

    Jon

    Quote for the Week

    If you can get into a great company, stay in for a long time. That’s the easiest and biggest money you’ll possibly make. But it’s so hard to do, because they bid the great companies, or things that look like great companies, up so high that it makes that strategy not work… So that’s the trouble, is that they sell so high priced that they make it hard for you to get. But wouldn’t you expect that? Why would you expect that something everybody can see is a great company, of course they’re going to bid the price up so high that maybe it’s not such a good investment. — Charlie Munger (Source)

    Continue Reading…


Previous Page
1 … 27 28 29 30 31 … 233
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