The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing. A Book of Practical Counsel (Revised Edition)
- ISBN13: 9780060555665
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The Classic Text Annotated to Update Graham’s Timeless Wisdom for Today’s Market Conditions
The greatest investment advisor of the twentieth century, Benjamin Graham taught and inspired people worldwide. Graham’s philosophy of “value investing” — which shields investors from substantial error and teaches them to develop long-term strategies — has made The Intelligent Investor the stock market bible ever since its original publication in 1949.
Over the years, market developments have proven the wisdom of Graham’s strategies. While preserving the integrity of Graham’s original text, this revised edition includes updated commentary by noted financial journalist Jason Zweig, whose perspective incorporates the realities of today’s market, draws parallels between Graham’s examples and today’s financial headlines, and gives readers a more thorough understanding of how to apply Graham’s principles.
Vital and indispensable, this HarperBusiness Essentials edition of The Intelligent Investor is the most important book you will ever read on how to reach your financial goals.
Among the library of investment books promising no-fail strategies for riches, Benjamin Graham’s classic, The Intelligent Investor, offers no guarantees or gimmicks but overflows with the wisdom at the core of all good portfolio management.
The hallmark of Graham’s philosophy is not profit maximization but loss minimization. In this respect, The Intelligent Investor is a book for true investors, not speculators or day traders. He provides, “in a form suitable for the laymen, guidance in adoption and execution of an investment policy” (1). This policy is inherently for the longer term and requires a commitment of effort. Where the speculator follows market trends, the investor uses discipline, research, and his analytical ability to make unpopular but sound investments in bargains relative to current asset value. Graham coaches the investor to develop a rational plan for buying stocks and bonds, and he argues that this plan must be a bulwark against emotional behavior that will always be tempting during abrupt bull and bear markets.
Since it was first published in 1949, Graham’s investment guide has sold over a million copies and has been praised by such luminaries as Warren E. Buffet as “the best book on investing ever written.” These accolades are well deserved. In its new form–with commentary on each chapter and extensive footnotes prepared by senior Money editor, Jason Zweig–the classic is now updated in light of changes in investment vehicles and market activities since 1972. What remains is a better book. Graham’s sage advice, analytical guides, and cautionary tales are still valid for the contemporary investor, and Zweig’s commentaries demonstrate the relevance of Graham’s principles in light of 1990s and early twenty-first century market trends. –Patrick O’Kelley
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(out of 176 reviews)
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Review by neurotome for The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing. A Book of Practical Counsel (Revised Edition)
Rating:
This is the 4th edition of Benjamin Graham’s landmark book for the investing public, called “The Intelligent Investor.” However, it’s been “updated” for 2003 by Jason Zweig, a senior editor and writer at CNN/Money, and overall I think this detracts from, rather than improves, the book. I rate Graham’s book 5 stars and Zweig’s contributions get 3 stars: overall, 4 stars.
First off, there are 3 contributors to this book: Buffett, Graham and Zweig. Warren Buffett, the superinvestor who heads Berkshire Hathaway, is frequently pointed out as one of the world’s great investors/stock pickers and also as Ben Graham’s star student. Buffett’s preface to this book consists of 2 pages: a biographical essay he wrote about Graham in 1976, saying nice things about Graham’s personal qualities; and a recommendation to pay particular attention to Chapters 8 and 20. (Buffett, incidentally, cannot be honestly said to have been influenced by this book; his bible was Graham’s landmark 1940 textbook for the professional security analyst, called “Security Analysis.”) So Buffettologists should know that there will be little to interest them here.
Graham’s text is level-headed and sane, and makes for wonderful reading. His distinction between speculators and investors, his way of viewing the markets, and his methodical approach to considering the inherent value of investments is required reading. In my opinion, any non-professional who’s interested in investing money could benefit from reading it. Enough said about that.
However, Graham’s book makes up only about 1/3 of the present volume. The format is the following: Graham writes a 6 page chapter; Zweig pads that chapter out to 8 pages with giant footnotes; and then Zweig appends a 10-15 page “commentary” to each chapter. Now who exactly is Jason Zweig? I’d never heard of him. His qualifications are very different from Graham’s and Buffett’s; he is a writer for CNN/Money magazine. I don’t consider him to be an investment professional.
Unfortunately, this shows in his writing. Whereas Graham’s text is even-handed, methodical, and rational, Zweig comes across as hysterical, emotional, and shrill. His annoying habit of flinging superlatives around (he frequently mentions Buffett as “the greatest investor of all time”, and calls Graham the “greatest practical investment thinker of all time”) is annoying and adds little to understanding. But much worse is his incessant habit of putting words into Graham’s mouth. About 3 or 4 chapters in I began to chafe at this. “Who is this Jason Zweig exactly,” I thought, “and how exactly does he claim to know how Graham would have analyzed the tech bubble of 1999-2000?”
As I started paying closer attention, I began to feel that Zweig was making comments – under the guise of “updating” Graham’s ideas – that Graham himself would never have endorsed. This bothered me. I feel that, in a way, I was baited with Graham’s name into buying a book by Jason Zweig, and it’s not the book I thought I was buying.
To be fair, Zweig’s commentary is often interesting. His commentary on Chapter 12 has nothing to do with Graham’s chapter (on analyzing per-share earnings) at all; rather, it is a scathing, well-presented, easily understood, and fairly detailed analysis of certain examples of accounting irregularities that contributed to the tech blowup and led to Sarbanes-Oxley. (I wouldn’t be surprised to learn Zweig had written a book of his own about this topic; if so, I may buy it.) But this only further strengthens the feeling, present always, that Zweig is less interested in explaining Graham’s text and more interested in pushing his own agenda and ways of investment thinking. Now for the casual reader who enjoys CNN/Money’s style and format as their principal source of investment advice, they may truly enjoy and benefit from this. But I wanted to read Graham’s historical text as a whole and interpret it myself; Zweig’s constant, harping interpolations severely detracted from my ability to do this.
Finally, there is little in the first 10 chapters of this book that has not become near-dogma for the conservative, value-oriented small investor, repeated ad nauseam in the pages of Money, Forbes, the Motley Fool, and elsewhere. The meat of the book is in the last half, where Graham touches – lightly – on issues that the conservative investor may be interested in valuing, and how to do it right. Frankly I was expecting him to go into more depth on these topics, and I will probably be picking up a copy of either The Interpretation of Financial Statements or Security Analysis (the 1940 edition seems to be the consensus pick) to learn more about his thoughts on these matters.