Economics · Similar reads
Books like The Dhandho Investor
The Dhandho Investor by Mohnish Pabrai is about value investing, risk and uncertainty, capital allocation. If that's what drew you in, here are 6 books that share its DNA — each summarized on Superbook, and ready to chat with in the app.
- The Intelligent Investor
01
Benjamin Graham · Economics
The Intelligent Investor is Benjamin Graham's case that successful investing has less to do with picking the right stocks than with managing your own behavior.
Read the summary → - The Essays of Warren Buffett
02
Warren Buffett · Economics
The Essays of Warren Buffett is Lawrence Cunningham's thematic compilation of Warren Buffett's annual letters to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, spanning from the 1970s through the year of publication.
Read the summary → - Margin of Safety
03
Seth Klarman · Economics
Margin of Safety is Seth Klarman's 1991 treatise on value investing, subtitled "Risk-Averse Value Investing Strategies for the Thoughtful Investor." The book has never been reprinted and used copies sell for hundreds to thousands of dollars, giving it a near-mythical status among serious investors.
Read the summary → - The Little Book That Still Beats the Market
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The Little Book That Still Beats the Market
Joel Greenblatt · Economics
The Little Book That Still Beats the Market is Joel Greenblatt's attempt to distill value investing into a two-variable formula that any individual investor can run.
Read the summary → - 100 to 1 in the Stock Market
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Thomas Phelps · Economics
100 to 1 in the Stock Market, published in 1972 by Thomas Phelps, is a study of the conditions under which stocks return one hundred times an investor's original investment — and an argument that such stocks are more common and more identifiable in advance than most investors believe.
Read the summary → - A Random Walk Down Wall Street
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A Random Walk Down Wall Street
Burton G. Malkiel · Economics
A Random Walk Down Wall Street is Burton Malkiel's argument that stock prices move in a way that is effectively unpredictable, that professional fund managers cannot consistently beat the market, and that the rational response for most investors is to buy and hold a diversified index fund.
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