NEW ORLEANS - When investor Warren Buffett calls a book on investing "by far the best book about investing ever written," it is common sense to concede the point. One does this while gently pointing out that The Intelligent Investor by Professor Benjamin Graham, with a third edition for its 75th anniversary (HarperCollins, Oct 22), contains a lot of musty musings on railroad shares and the markets of 1972, requires (and gets) contemporary commentary by the Wall Street Journal's Jason Zweig after each of its original chapters, and provides investment advice that would have led over the last 30 years to lousy returns. This is why the book is likely more owned than read.
But it should be read for its core, originating importance: an inoculation against bad habits of mind. Graham (born Grossbaum) was an active investor at his own firm in the 1920s through the 1950s. An undergrad polymath at Columbia University (English, maths, philosophy, music, Latin and Greek), he seemed inclined always to also teach, maybe a legacy of being the great-grandson of an unsurpassably named famous Warsaw rabbi Yaakov Gesundheit.
Mr. Buffett took classes from Graham at Columbia Business School and later worked for him for two years, 70 years ago. The Intelligent Investor was Graham's second book, a popularizing follow-up to his and Professor David Dodd's more technical Security Analysis.
After the 1949 original, The Intelligent Investor was reissued three more times in Graham's lifetime, with sedimentary layers of financial lessons from the first three quarters of the 20th century. He was 79 at the publication of his last edition, which can meander and repeat. And so for this edition, Mr. Zweig provides footnotes and follow-on commentary, sometimes nearly as long as the original chapter: postscripts to Graham's advice, wisdom from other market sages, references to GameStop or SPACs, and his own morally urgent advice.
Bu hikaye The Straits Times dergisinin November 03, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The Straits Times dergisinin November 03, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
South Korea's defence ministry denies preferential treatment for BTS' V
South Korea's Ministry of National Defence has refuted claims that V, a member of K-pop boy band BTS, received preferential treatment while serving in the military.
K-actor Jung Woo-sung admits to fathering model Moon Ga-bi's child
South Korean actor Jung Woo-sung, 51, admitted on Nov 24 that he is the father of South Korean model Moon Ga-bi's child.
Chuck Woolery was the first host of Wheel Of Fortune
Chuck Woolery (right), the affable host of Love Connection, Wheel Of Fortune and other television game shows in the United States, who later criticized liberal values and the US Democratic Party as the co-host of a popular right-wing podcast, died on Nov 23 at his home in Texas. He was 83.
Sole Singaporean contestant Yang Yan eliminated
Idol survival reality show Starlight Boys
Spotlight on two female-directed movies in India
Laapataa Ladies and All We Imagine As Light might have a shot at winning Academy Awards, a rare prospect for the country
For diamond shoppers, yet another choice to make – natural or man-made?
With Thanksgiving marking the unofficial start of engagement season - late November through Valentine's Day is when marriage proposals are common - ring buying is top of mind for many couples considering marriage.
Culture and cuisine in Hanoi
Visit the Vietnamese capital's Opera House and sample offerings from Michelin-starred chefs in Senses of Capella
BUDGET TIPS FOR FAMILY TRIPS
Going abroad? Here are five money-saving hacks for the holidays with your nearest and dearest
How the late Arthur Frommer inspired travellers to 'just do it'
In the 1980s, when I planned my first trip to Europe, I cannot remember which Frommer's travel guidebook I took along.
Tension, pressure, nerve, genius: At the chess c'ship, the wait is worth it
For all the flow of action, all sport involves varied acts of waiting. We wait for the goal in football, the shooter to fire between heartbeats, a snarling Rafael Nadal to uppercut the air in delight.