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D**Z
Should be the Fundamental Five Rules for any beginning Investor!
A few years ago I purchased Pat Dorsey's The Little Book that Builds Wealth, at the time I was just learning the basics of the Stock Market, and the difference between Value Investing, and Market Driven "Investing", or what most people say is Fundamental Analysis - (looking at companies based on their sales, revenue,debt, product advantage, etc!) and technical analysis which mostly evaluates a stock based on what the Market is doing and how it feels about that particular stock or industry. They both have their advantages and disadvantages but I'm convinced (and most experts agree) that investing based on a company's underlying worth (its fundamentals) is the only way to make money and build wealth long term in the stock market, yes yes technical analysis can help you get "lucky" and make some short term big gains, and also understand the momentum of a stock or an industry, but technical analysis alone is like dating just based on looks, its fun for awhile but if there's nothing else there the relationship is headed for trouble.Anyway I read Dorsey's Little Book and Michael SIncere's great Understanding Stocks books about 5 years plus years ago (plus the Graham classic Intelligent Investor), and then financial crisis hit and the recession started and although I didn't lose much money (on stocks at least)I still shied away from the market for the next couple years, but the investments I did hold onto did see some modest but impressive gains over the last few years and has just proved to me the accuracy of Dorsey's book along with other Value based investors. Just look at the increase of Warren Buffet's company the last few years, not to mention the mega merger of Heinz and Kraft. Anyway long story short is that I do firmly believe that the only reason anybody should be risking their money in the Wall St. casino is if they know that they are "investing" not gambling on fundamentally good companies that they reasonably believe will be worth either more in value, or in a worse case equal value to what they are currently valued at today. Dorsey's book "The Five Rules" will show you how determine that value in spades, its not the only book out there of its kind and I have read others, but Dorsey's style is easy to follow but at the same time deep enough to show you that he (and the analysts at Morningstar) really do know their stuff. Nobody (that we know of) has reliably predicted the market's future, but Dorsey's book will give you a give you a good foundation to know whatever happens in the market there a some stocks that are "fundamentally" just better than others.Also Recommend:"Understanding Stocks" 2nd Edition - Michael Sincere"Understanding Options" 2nd Ed. - Michael Sincere"The Little Book of Commonsense Investing" John Bogle"Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets" Peter Schiff
J**L
silly title, great book
Have been meaning to put in a good word for this book for a long time. It's a gem. I've read an embarrassingly large number of introductions to investing in equities and this is probably the best. Other books purport to tell you how to identify hot stocks; Dorsey shows how to value companies. This isn't just a matter of understanding PE ratios and other traditional metrics, which most books explain more or less adequately. Instead, it means analyzing balance sheets and cash flow and income statements. _Five Rules_ provides as reader-friendly an introduction to assessing a company's financial statements as I've come across, with plenty of real-world examples. The object in the end is to determine the present value of a company's future cash flows, and Dorsey's explanation of a simplified version of Fisher's and William's discounted cash flow model is lucid and lively. Clorox is the company evaluated in this chapter, and en route there are instructive comparisons of HP and Dell, Best Buy and Circuit City, and, finally, AMD and Biomet. Chapter 8, Avoiding Financial Fakery, is particularly helpful. Obviously, having read this book and nothing else, you're not going to be able to spot something fishy in the footnotes to Microsoft's income statement that has escaped the attention of all the analysts. But for someone without a background in accounting, _Five Rules_ is a godsend.Dorsey then conducts a very informative tour d'horizon of 13 industries. It should go without saying that before you invest in a company, you'd want to find out something about the economics of its industry, so you can compare apples with apples. The chapter on health care is especially good, but I found them all excellent.In an Ameritrade ad that aired this week, a teenager asks her dad for $80 for a pair of jeans. The dad is nonplused, but the girl assures him that everyone is buying these jeans. He asks her who the manufacturer is, promptly logs onto Ameritrade, checks a chart, and buys the company's stock. The guy then gives his daughter the $80, a reward for the hot tip, presumably. He might do OK this time, but you have to figure he'd be a lot better off in the long run investing a fraction of that $80 in _Five Rules_.Bottom line: there are a ton of books on trading strategies, but if you're looking for a practical book on value investing, this is the best.
F**Y
Educational, different and a bit difficult if you're looking to learn
Now, you can't breeze through this book like you would "One Up on Wall Street," but that's because this book covers a lot of accounting and financial concepts involved with companies. It's sort of a textbook on how to find good companies using various different financial metrics. Dorsey definitely knows his stuff, but in order to learn what he's teaching you, you've gotta pay rapt attention throughout the entire book and have pen in hand to highlight everything. I'm an engineer by profession, so I'm accustomed to working with math, etc., but getting into the accounting and financial terminology for most of 350 pages can be exhausting. The back half of the book is downright revolutionary in that it explores the different investment sectors (e.g. health care, retail, consumer products) and tells you how to analyze companies within those sectors.It might seem obvious that one should generally be wary of restaurant stocks because, hey, you eat at the Outback all the time and you see it's crowded all the time, so you should by the stock, right? Maybe. Dorsey explains it to you and you say, "Yeah, that makes sense." Any schlub can whistle on down, rent some space and start cooking meals for people. That's why the restaurant business is highly competitive, 'cause it's easy for competition to sprout up.You should definitely have a copy of this book if you're a serious investor, but don't think you're just gonna kick back on the beach and read it (unless, of course, you're not really serious about an education in investing).
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