About This Book
"The Intelligent Investor" by Benjamin Graham is a renowned investment book that provides timeless principles for successful investing. Graham, often called the father of value investing, shares his strategies and insights on how to approach the stock market with intelligence and caution.
In this book, Graham emphasizes the importance of thorough research and analysis before making investment decisions. He highlights the difference between investing and speculation, focusing on the concept of buying stocks when they are undervalued and selling them when they become overvalued.
Graham advocates for a long-term, patient approach to investing, urging readers to ignore market fluctuations and instead focus on the intrinsic value of a company. He emphasizes the idea of margin of safety, which involves buying stocks at a significant discount to their intrinsic value to protect against potential losses.
"The Intelligent Investor" also provides valuable advice on diversification, portfolio management, and the importance of discipline in achieving investment success. Graham stresses the need for investors to remain rational and not be swayed by market emotions or fads.
With its clear language and practical advice, this book serves as a guide for investors of all levels of experience, aiming to help readers develop their own investment strategies based on sound principles rather than relying on speculation or market timing.
Overall, "The Intelligent Investor" is a timeless classic that continues to provide valuable insights into the world of investing, emphasizing the importance of research, patience, and discipline for achieving long-term financial success in the stock market.
In this book, Graham emphasizes the importance of thorough research and analysis before making investment decisions. He highlights the difference between investing and speculation, focusing on the concept of buying stocks when they are undervalued and selling them when they become overvalued.
Graham advocates for a long-term, patient approach to investing, urging readers to ignore market fluctuations and instead focus on the intrinsic value of a company. He emphasizes the idea of margin of safety, which involves buying stocks at a significant discount to their intrinsic value to protect against potential losses.
"The Intelligent Investor" also provides valuable advice on diversification, portfolio management, and the importance of discipline in achieving investment success. Graham stresses the need for investors to remain rational and not be swayed by market emotions or fads.
With its clear language and practical advice, this book serves as a guide for investors of all levels of experience, aiming to help readers develop their own investment strategies based on sound principles rather than relying on speculation or market timing.
Overall, "The Intelligent Investor" is a timeless classic that continues to provide valuable insights into the world of investing, emphasizing the importance of research, patience, and discipline for achieving long-term financial success in the stock market.
What People Are Saying
“[One of the books in my] business book canon”
More Praise
Warren Buffett: "I read the first edition of this book early in 1950, when I was nineteen. I thought then that it was by far the best book about investing ever written. I still think it is." One of the books Bill Ackman asked his newly-hired analyst to read before joining Pershing Square. Included on Jamie Dimon's list of favorite books he sent to JP Morgan summer interns in 2010.
Revisit Your Highlights, Deepen Your Understanding
Import your Kindle highlights to review, organize, and share the ideas that matter most to you.
Get the free browser extension
Share This Book
More Books in Investing
View More
Poor Charlie's Almanack
Charlie Munger

Antifragile
Nassim Nicholas Taleb

Skin In The Game
Nassim Taleb

Thinking In Bets
Annie Duke

Security Analysis
Benjamin Graham

The Dao of Capital
Mark Spitznagel

The Psychology of Money
Morgan Housel

When Genius Failed
Roger Lowenstein

Bitcoin Billionaires
Ben Mezrich

Secrets of Sand Hill Road
Scott Kupor

The Black Swan
Nassim Taleb

The Most Important Thing
Howard Marks

The Success Equation
Michael Mauboussin

Charlie Munger
Tren Griffin

Expectations Investing
Michael Mauboussin

Fooling Some of the People All of the Time
David Einhorn

Layered Money
Nik Bhatia

Manias, Panics, and Crashes
Robert Aliber

Market Wizards
Jack Schwager

Mastering The Market Cycle
Howard Marks

Money
Tony Robbins

More Than You Know
Michael Mauboussin

Reminiscences of a Stock Operator
Edwin Lefevre

Stress Test
Timothy Geithner

The (Mis)Behavior of Markets
Benoit Mandelbrot

The Alchemy of Finance
George Soros

The Essays of Warren Buffett
Lawrence Cunningham & Warren Buffett

The Most Important Thing Illuminated
Howard Marks

The Tao of Charlie Munger
David Clark

The Warren Buffett Way
Robert Hagstrom
Popular Books Recommended by Great Minds 📚

Sapiens
Yuval Noah Harari

The Hard Thing About Hard Things
Ben Horowitz

Zero to One
Peter Thiel

High Output Management
Andrew Grove

Principles
Ray Dalio

Shoe Dog
Phil Knight

Snow Crash
Neal Stephenson

Meditations
Marcus Aurelius

Originals
Adam Grant

Poor Charlie's Almanack
Charlie Munger

The Innovators Dilemma
Clayton Christensen

The Lean Startup
Eric Reis

The Sovereign Individual
James Dale Davidson & William Rees-Mogg

High Growth Handbook
Elad Gil

Influence
Robert Cialdini

Principles for Dealing With The Changing World Order
Ray Dalio

Rework
Jason Fried

Surely You're Joking Mr. Feynman
Richard Feynman

The Ride of a Lifetime
Bob Iger

The Three Body Problem
Cixin Liu

Thinking, Fast and Slow
Daniel Kahneman

7 Powers
Hamilton Helmer

Antifragile
Nassim Nicholas Taleb

Atlas Shrugged
Ayn Rand

Blitzscaling
Reid Hoffman

Dune
Frank Herbert

Foundation
Isaac Asimov

Good To Great
Jim Collins

Hopping Over The Rabbit Hole
Anthony Scaramucci

Man's Search for Meaning
Viktor Frankl
