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The Successful Investor Today: 14 Simple Truths You Must Know When You Invest

The Successful Investor Today: 14 Simple Truths You Must Know When You Invest

List Price: $25.95
Your Price: $17.13
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Truth
Review: Bought the book thinking it would be more of the same. However there are lots of interesting insights that make this book a must read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Invest in this book
Review: I am the author of The Unbeatable Market: Taking the Indexing Path to Financial Peace of Mind. My book reaches essentially similar conclusions as does Larry Swedroe's The Successful Investor Today. Through his previous books, articles, and lectures Swedroe has been a tireless and effective advocate for what mountains of evidence proves is a superior way to invest-- passively managed index funds. Wall Street rejects passive management because it's antithetical to its self-interest. Swedroe makes this clear in Truth 4: The Interests of Wall Street and the Financial Media Are Not Aligned With Those of Investors. The hope of beating the market is very alluring for investors. That's why the "14 Simple Truths" of Swedroe's book are so vital for investors to know. Knowledge is the best defense against Wall Street's massive con game. His book is well written, well documented, and highly readable. If you're an investor, do yourself a favor and buy this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another Excellent Addition To Our "Top 20" List
Review: Larry Swedroe's fourth book begins with an effective update on the "active investment management" vs. "passive investment management" "debate." His simple example on page 3 (A = B + C) conclusively demonstrates the logic that the high costs of active management doom it to failure. His recitation of the many studies of active management, and of the follies of chasing after the hot investment manager, provide important insights from both individual investors and investment professionals alike.
Mr. Swedroe also effectively addresses the significance of valuation levels of the market in "Truth 6: The Price You Pay Matters." In so doing, he provides an important working knowledge of the financial history of the U.S. markets, important for every investor to possess.
I enjoyed most his chapter on the impact of taxes upon investor's net investment returns, in which he provided good insight into the significance of this issue and the means to minimize the "tax drag" on investment returns.
Any investor who has any type of debt (credit card, car loan, or home mortgage) should be certain to review Appendix D, in which Larry presents the best insights I have ever read as to the impact that debt possesses upon investment decisions. Before an investor follows any advice to not pay off debt (and invest the funds instead), these 5 pages of wisdom are a must read.
In summary, Larry Swedroe's book, The Successful Investor Today, is an important addition to every investor's library. Like Mr. Swedroes' previous books, this book joins my "Top 20" lists - both for individual investors and professionals - as an essential read for those seeking to be informed and educated as to investments and financial planning. Larry Swedroe is one of the most influential authors today of investment articles and books directed to individual investors. He is a true master of taking the complicated concepts imbedded in Modern Portfolio Theory and presenting them in a format both understandable and useful to the individual investor.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: No More Gambling
Review: One day in Las Vegas, I realized the best way to make money with gambling is to own the casinos. I never gambled again. Even better, I later realized the best way to make money with stocks is to be a broker, write an investment newsletter or manage a mutual fund. After all, if these guys know so much about investments, why are they hawking their expertise rather than just making a personal killing in the market?

After reading "The Successful Investor Today," I realized I was right! The odds are against you as a stock picker or mutual fund investor. Every time you win, you lose. You whet lots of little beaks every day. The behind-the-scene guys take their cut whether you make money or lose money.

Fortunately, your odds of winning tilt to your favor when you invest in the planet's commercial future. Larry Swedroe explains how you can do this without whetting the experts' beaks.

I've read several investment books and this was by far the best. It makes the most sense and explains why investing is so hard.

I wish the book had been a little more specific on how to work out your own allocations and where to buy some of the international investments. I was going to give the book four stars, but the author quickly answered my email questions and I'm in business!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Index and Diversify - Echoes Earlier Books
Review: Readers of Larry E. Swedroe's earlier books (including What Wall Street Doesn't Want You to Know and Rational Investing in Irrational Times) will find themselves in familiar territory here: Active portfolio managers underperform their benchmark indexes by about 1.8% even before taxes. Capturing the "incremental" advantage needed to justify portfolio management fees, trading costs, and tax consequences in an efficient market can happen, but it is more luck than repeatable insight. Exploiting the market's inefficiencies, its "anomalies", in a consistent way is impractical, because the markets do their job and adjust quickly to news. Ultimately, active stock selection and market timing are a loser's game not worth playing. Indeed, individual stock selection is a gamble for Swedroe since it it an example of "uncompensated risk" that can be so easily diversified away. The problem is that investors underestimate the great number of stocks that do poorly because of the spectacular results of a few. Better to own low cost, tax efficient, passively managed index funds. Diversify across a broad range of non-correlated asset classes to reduce risk. Use large and small company stocks, international and emerging market stocks, bonds, and real estate. Then focus on lowering management fees and owning funds that control capital gains taxes to reduce the drag on returns. So much of this reworks the author's earlier writing that readers will not miss a lot by choosing just one of his books. Still, "The Successful Investor" tries to update the material. And there is some good thinking on the risk of value stocks (versus growth stocks) and their relative performance during inflationary periods. Elsewhere, a case is made for including international small cap stocks (over international large cap stocks)and emerging market stocks in a diversified portfolio. Unfortunately there are few investment products that make these last asset classes available to investors at this time. Investors might be advised to look at the growing number of exchange traded funds (ETF) that shadow indexes at low cost to fill-in a portfolio's asset gaps. Otherwise, Swedroe's ideas direct the investor to building a diversified portfolio for the long run based on an evolving body of sound academic research.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best investment approach may also be the simplest.
Review: The investing approach espoused by Swedroe is actually among the simplest and least time consuming approaches available - that of passive index investing with occasional portfolio rebalancing. Yet he doesn't recommend it because it is simple, but because the research supports it as the best approach to yield the highest actual returns over time. The caveat "over time" is the key, which is what most people are interested in - not short term run-ups followed by disappointing losses. And "actual returns" since many people fail to consider trading costs, taxes, and other considerations that reduce their returns. One interesting study alluded to in this book and expounded on in his other books relates to the Value Line survey, which demonstrates market-beating returns and is highly rated in the Hulbert newsletter. Yet after considering trading and other costs, the returns underperform the market. Reality often stands in stark contrast to what we want to believe.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent and Clear
Review: This book is a must read for any self-directed investor. Swedroe makes his case in plain english with examples that are clear and understandable even to those (myself included) who lack education in finance and economics. Unfortunately for most of us, the recent example of reversion to the mean is now obvious in hindsight.

Great book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best investment approach may also be the simplest.
Review: This excellent book sums up the case for a winning stock market strategy: Don't waste time, effort, and money trying to beat the market. Adopt a strategy of indexing to accomplish two goals: sharply reduced trading expenses and average market performance.

Since those who try to beat the market incur large expenses with their research and trading costs, indexing saves those costs and therefore provides superior stock market returns. Don't let Wall Street's hype fool you and don't pay huge fees for underperformance.

This book is recommended for anyone who wants to achieve better results when investing in the stock market.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Important Information for the Public Investor
Review: This excellent book sums up the case for a winning stock market strategy: Don't waste time, effort, and money trying to beat the market. Adopt a strategy of indexing to accomplish two goals: sharply reduced trading expenses and average market performance.

Since those who try to beat the market incur large expenses with their research and trading costs, indexing saves those costs and therefore provides superior stock market returns. Don't let Wall Street's hype fool you and don't pay huge fees for underperformance.

This book is recommended for anyone who wants to achieve better results when investing in the stock market.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An Interesting Complement
Review: This is an interesting complement to the writings of William Berstein and takes a slightly different point of view on most of the topics including asset allocation and indexing. This is definitely a guide to the merits of indexing and diversification but the justifications come from a different direction than Bernstein and some may find this discussion more palatable. Swedroe keeps it simple and to the point. Once again I do not agree with every last word the author utters but overall this is a great book. The material may be similar to the author's previous books but the real value of his material in general lies in his different approach than say Gibson or Bernstein. No matter how you approach it the vast majority of evidence supports indexing over active management.


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