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| General Discussion Please read our Forum Rules before posting Feel free to talk about anything and everything about money. |
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I just finished reading Happy Pocket Full of Money by David Cameron. It was amazing and has totally changed the way I look at money. Not your typical money book. It talks about money at a deeper level. VERY interesting!
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The wealthy Barber is one of the easiest books to understand.
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I like Living More with Less, will second the More with Less Cookbook, Saving on a Shoestring by Barbara O'Neill, the Complete Tightwad Gazette, The Only Investment Guide You'll Ever Need, and for spunky nostalgia, Orchids on Your Budget by Marjorie Hillis.
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one I really enjoyed was "Generation Debt" by Anya Kamenetz. The book was written by someone my age (she was born the same year as me) and it really puts insights onto the younger generation.
I got it out of the library http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...548762?ie=UTF8 |
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The book that got me started was Debt No More by Larry Burkett from the local library, all of his books are good but this one gives you real life examples from couples that he had counseled.
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I just read "The Intelligent Investor" by Benjamin Graham. This book isn't like the others shown here...the ones above are more on how to live frugally. This book is about Value investing, and how stocks are actually a small section of a company instead of a "bet" on how well the stock is going to do in the future. It was written in 1949, updated in the 60's, the 70's and in 2003. It was very challenging reading, but I just finished yesterday and am going to start it over again so I can take notes and really understand what he is saying.
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heh, well this forum you can't take to the drs office, or hold in your lap while DH has the computer..
which is why I was trying to get some out of the library |
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Ohhhh goody books!!
Like me, you also might love: The Richest Man In Babylon by Clason - give it as a gift all the time -(bought frugally at used book stores) Reread this one approximately every 6 months or so. MEMORIZE the rules!! Anyone gripes to me about their finances I hand them this book. Eat Healthy for $50 a Week - Rhonda Barfield - Was already doing many of these things but it's handy for a reference when needing a refresher! Wealthy Barber - this one is really good for people like me who want to do 'Anticipatory Budgeting'. That means squirreling away now for future needs. He explains the WHY you need to better than most. Not just that you need to but WHYFORBECAUSE. This one is out of date and somewhat discredited at some point I believe, but still very useful and that is: The Beardstown Ladies first book - whatever that title was. It helped me get started investing. They made me believe that if these little ol' ladies could understand and successfully invest, then so could I. Joined my investment club because of this book. Got involved w/DRIPS and NAIC. --good stuff. (Seems they miscalcuted their returns or something.) Your Money Or Your Life by Dominquez. Ditto what everyone else said. It helped me decide at a time I was conflicted that staying home w/my kids was right for me At That Point In Time. Got me logging my expenses. And drawing smiley faces on those days I didn't spend! Quantifying objectively the 'goody' I felt when spending. GOOD! GOOD! Title something like -- Simplify Your Life by Elaine. St. James. Not only about money, but simplicity in needs vs. wants. I found it very clarifying. Simple things really, and maybe not explicit in the book but goofy things I was doing like buying food that made me fat while spending gazillions of dollars on diet books, diet pills, etc. -Got off that MerryGoRound. Now me just fluffy! But it's the happy dollars in my pocket that make me look that way - no, REALLY!! Yes, Grandmother what a big roll of cash at my waistline! signed BootaliciousBoHineyBudgeterThe Truth About Money - by Ric Edelman. NOT JUST A REHASH!! Many of his ideas were new concepts to me. Debt Reduction Strategies - by John Avanzini. Goodbye Mortgage!! Cashing in on the American Dream: How to Retire at 35 by Terhorst, Paul. Anything by Mary Hunt and Ron Blue. Now for fun - you might enjoy many of the fictionalized Paul E. Erdman's books... Zero Coupon The Silver Bears The Swiss Account Last Days of America The Palace {Greedy4chips I think this one's for you! The Panic of '89 The Crash of '79 The Billion Dollar Sure Thing / also printed under title of The Billion Dollar Killing The Set-Up - most of his books are fiction but he teaches us stuff about banking/finance/investing at the same time we are enjoying a rich storyline. I read once for pleasure and a second time w/highlighter & notebook. For all these books look for them at the library first for free - then if you really like them buy them at used bookstore or on half.com or ebay. -LuxLivingFrugalis |
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In early March, Shane Tristch -- the managing editor at Chicago Magazine -- published an article raising doubts about the stated performance of the Beardstown Ladies Investment Club. It turns out that he was right to be skeptical. After Tritsch's article hit the stands, the Ladies agreed to submit their portfolio to a public audit by Big Six accountant, Price Waterhouse. The firm's review yielded unhappy results for the club. Their investment returns from 1984-1993 rang up a disappointing 9.1% per year versus the 14.9% annual return from the S&P 500 index over the same period.While that whole scandal seems to be the result of an honest mistake and an over-zealous publisher, it's important to remember that the Ladies actually underperformed the S&P500 from 1984-1993, which makes their investment advice look pretty worthless. In the old days, when you needed $100,000 to open a brokerage account and had to buy 100+ shares at a time, investment clubs made sense for people with limited money, but now investment clubs make a lot less sense because anyone with $1000 can open an online brokerage account and buy 40 shares of a $25 stock, then add another $1000 two to six times a year till they own 15-20 stocks. While that doesn't give you the immediate diversification of an investment club, it does give you a lot more control of your own money. People who join an investment club are also likely to re-enforce each others bad habits and feed on each others hysteria. The NAIC Stock Selection Guide and other advice from them helps to counteract this tendency, but I still think an individual is better off acting as an individual, unless he can locate a club in which each member is truly an expert in a different portion of the market. However, that's just my humble opinion. There's a lot to be said for having live bodies you can discuss investing with on a regular basis, and for many people an investment club is a worthwhile investment. (pun intended ) |
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True conversation: Boss said, "You're slacking off too much, I need all this done right now." I said, "I've had about enough of this. You know I do 2-3 times as much work as anyone else in here, but you never fuss at them about slacking off." Boss replied, "That's because I know it wouldn't do any good to fuss at them. You're the only person here I can count on to get things done!" {I wish I were making that up, but I swear I'm not. I worked there another three years before walking out in the middle of a shift.} |
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I just finished reading "The Bogleheads Guide to Investing", and it is great. A very solid introduction to investing that covers the basics very well, but actually goes into a lot of detail in many different areas. I very much reccommend it to anyone who wants to get started investing, or anyone who is investing and wants to learn more.
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I went into my investment club TO LEARN and so did the others I joined with - we learn together. Always profitable? No. But we learn. The Beardstown ladies books were much more than just their portfolios' results. It was alot of encouragement that ANYONE who is willing can learn about a subject that pretty much up until that time was off-limits to the average Josephine on the streets. Those women and their stories were EMPOWERING EXAMPLES to many people who would otherwise have been intimidated out of the market. |
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After all, if individual investors hate to admit buying a certain stock was a mistake, I can only imagine how much harder it is to stand up in front a group and say "We should not have bought this stock," let alone "I should not have reccomended this stock." If, as you say, everyone in your investment club is 'learning' then there are probably a lot of bad habits in the group as a result of those habits/beliefs/feelings being common among inexperienced investors, but using objective stock selection criteria reduces the 'inexperience' factor. And what's true in investment clubs is true in internet forums too: Whatever the prevailing groupthink is, anyone who expresses even a little doubt in it does so at his own risk. When everyone thinks alike, no one thinks very much; and the nature of any group is to marginalize or isolate any member who doesn't agree with the majority. For example, mutual funds and mindless dollar-cost-averaging are a mainstay in the investment philosophy of many people in this forum, yet I shun both, and always have, for reasons I consider very sound. If they and I belonged to the same investing club, would there be any chance of my viewpoint influencing the buying decisions? I doubt it! Instead I would quickly be booted out, or would leave voluntarily to seek a group with the same wise/foolish viewpoint I already hold. That is why members of investment clubs (or internet forums) have to guard against their natural tendency to reinforce each others bad habits. Quote:
While I think inspiration and encouragement are both good things, if the specific financial advice doesn't beat the market averages, then you're wasting your time reading it. I haven't read much of the Ladies prose because their style is so clearly not my style and not a style I'm interested in learning. YMMV. |
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