Ok, I'm gonna give this Stock market a shot.
I want to read up on it first. No jumping in blindly for me.
Any book recommendations? I'm off to Borders tomorrow
Jim Kramer? Warren Buffet? Jason Kelly? Farleigh? Idiots guide? (yeah mvscal, save it)
Then there is this ssite:
http://books.global-investor.com/pages/ ... 5706927080
I have about 5K to start. but nothing gets invested until I know what I'm doing (again, save it, post monkeys)
Scott, Your thoughts?
Books?
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- Mister Bushice
- Drinking all the beer Luther left behind
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Tough to say which book to recommend until I know what you want to do.
Are you wanting to buy and hold for a long term?
Trade in and out?
Here's a couple I really like:
Reminiscences of a Stock Operator
(A Marketplace Book)
by Edwin Lefèvre
Investor's Business Daily Guide to the Markets by Investor's Business Daily
How To Make Money In Stocks: A Winning System in Good Times or Bad, 3rd Edition by William J. O'Neil (Paperback - May 23, 2002)
Are you wanting to buy and hold for a long term?
Trade in and out?
Here's a couple I really like:
Reminiscences of a Stock Operator
(A Marketplace Book)
by Edwin Lefèvre
Investor's Business Daily Guide to the Markets by Investor's Business Daily
How To Make Money In Stocks: A Winning System in Good Times or Bad, 3rd Edition by William J. O'Neil (Paperback - May 23, 2002)
- Mister Bushice
- Drinking all the beer Luther left behind
- Posts: 9490
- Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 2:39 pm
Don't know what I want to do yet either, but I'll figure it out.
If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator." —GWB Washington, D.C., Dec. 19, 2000
Martyred wrote: Hang in there, Whitey. Smart people are on their way with dictionaries.
War Wagon wrote:being as how I've got "stupid" draped all over, I'm not really sure.
- Mister Bushice
- Drinking all the beer Luther left behind
- Posts: 9490
- Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 2:39 pm
Here are the books I picked up for about 40 bucks total:
The Motley Fool Investment Guide by David and Tom Gardner.
The Successful Investor by William O'Neil
Understanding Stocks by Michael Sincere
I passed on Jim Cramers Real Money for now, as I felt that I needed some more base understanding of things and he was working at the next level up, and in more of a narrative story telling style.
Plus at $26 bucks a pop, I didn't think his book was that good of an investment at this point. :)
The books I picked were not only more affordable but provide a fairly broad range, if somewhat overlapping view of investing in a style I will absorb well.
A lot of the other books there were more about people hawking their own specific techniques rather than the bare bones of the market and investing.
Should take me a couple of weeks to get through them all, then it's off to the brokerage.
The Motley Fool Investment Guide by David and Tom Gardner.
The Successful Investor by William O'Neil
Understanding Stocks by Michael Sincere
I passed on Jim Cramers Real Money for now, as I felt that I needed some more base understanding of things and he was working at the next level up, and in more of a narrative story telling style.
Plus at $26 bucks a pop, I didn't think his book was that good of an investment at this point. :)
The books I picked were not only more affordable but provide a fairly broad range, if somewhat overlapping view of investing in a style I will absorb well.
A lot of the other books there were more about people hawking their own specific techniques rather than the bare bones of the market and investing.
Should take me a couple of weeks to get through them all, then it's off to the brokerage.
If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator." —GWB Washington, D.C., Dec. 19, 2000
Martyred wrote: Hang in there, Whitey. Smart people are on their way with dictionaries.
War Wagon wrote:being as how I've got "stupid" draped all over, I'm not really sure.