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Ten Anecdotal/Historical Book Ideas for Investors

About a month or so ago, I finally got around to reading Marty Schwartz’s classic, Pit Bull, which I can best describe as a colorful autobiography that uses the 1980s options world as a palette for many amusing anecdotes that are expertly conveyed. The book was such a fun read that I went through the whole thing in no more than 2-3 days, cobbling together bits and pieces of ‘free time’ in order to do so.

 

Schwartz’s book is pure entertainment and touches only briefly on methodologies and techniques, yet I was able to pull quite a few investment-related nuggets from it in a short period of time, with the added benefit that the learning process was all fun and no pain. The process got me thinking that perhaps the fastest way to effortlessly bombard the brain with useful investment ideas are those easy reads that provide a personal historical window into the markets.

 I am contrasting this process with the process I went through in trying to read and digest the ideas in Alan Farley’s The Master Swing Trader, which, despite the many interesting ideas, is about as fun to trudge through as Hegel.

 With this in mind, I offer the following ten books as relatively effortless ways to cross-pollinate your investment thinking with that of some of the better minds in the field, both past and present.

 Roughly in order of how quick and easy they are to read:

  • How I Made $2,000,000 in the Stock Market (Nicolas Darvas) – You can probably read this book in a little over an hour. There are only a few salient ideas, but these are destined to stick with you long after you have read the book. I also found that the path Darvas took along the way to developing his system bears a strong resemblance to my own.
  • Pit Bull (Marty Schwartz) – A fast-moving and superbly written account of a champion options trader. A great companion for a cross-country plane trip.
  • Reminiscences of a Stock Operator (Edwin Lefevre) – This is on almost everyone’s reading list, so I will say little about it, other than to point out that it is chock full of insight, yet still reads like a novel.
  • A Journey Through Economic Time (John Kenneth Galbraith) – A very different book from the others on this list, this is certainly one of the easiest economics reads out there, yet the survey of the economic landscape from WWI to after the fall of the Berlin Wall will give the reader a lot to think about.
  • My Life as a Quant (Emanuel Derman) – Another physicist who writes extremely well, Derman provides a thoughtful accounting of his personal journey through the (then) unlikely intersection of theoretical physics, finance and risk.
  • Investment Biker (Jim Rogers) and Adventure Capitalist (Jim Rogers) – These two books are probably best read back to back, in chronological order, starting with the Investment Biker’s 1990-1992 world tour, then using the 1999-2001 Adventure Capitalist jaunt to see how the world had changed over the course of a decade. This is first-person global macro analysis at its best, though you may not have the stamina to do your own world tour in one sitting…
  • Market Wizards (Jack Schwager), The New Market Wizards (Jack Schwager), and Stock Market Wizards (Jack Schwager) – I never thought I’d willingly place the Schwager wizards trilogy at the bottom of any list, but they end up here because they are more densely packed than the other books. Like the Jim Rogers duo, these are best consumed in small bites, on an empty stomach, leaving ample time for proper chewing and digestion. Schwager’s interview style and editing is such that he is able to deliver an astonishing amount of information in an easy to read fashion. The best news of all is that while the books are a great place for beginners to start, they somehow manage to improve with repeated reading.

Trading Quotes

  1. “Time is your friend; impulse is your enemy.” John (Jack) Bogle
  2. “When reward is at its pinnacle, risk is near at hand.” John (Jack) Bogle
  3. “Rule no. 1 is never loose money. Rule no. 2 is never forget rule number one.” Warren Buffett
  4. “Look at market fluctuations as your friend rather than your enemy. Profit from folly rather than participate in it.” Warren Buffett
  5. “I paraphrase Lord Rothschild: The time to buy is when there is blood on the streets.” David Dreman
  6. “It is absurd to think that the general public can ever make money out of market forecasts.” Benjamin Graham
  7. “The whole secret to winning and losing in the stock market is to lose the least amount possible when you are not right.” William J. O Neil
  8. “It is not whether you are right or wrong that is important, but how much money you make when you are right and how much you lose when you are wrong.” George Soros
  9. “If you want to have a better performance than the crowd, you must do things differently from the crowd.” John Templeton
  10. “My first rule is not to lose money. Losing an opportunity is minor in comparison, because there are always new opportunities around the corner.” Burt Dohmen
  11. “Experienced traders control risk, inexperienced traders chase gains.” Alan Farley
  12. “Most traders take a good system and destroy it by trying to make it into a perfect system.”
  13. “Trade what you see, Not what you think”
  14. “A Technician is an Artist and Technical Analysis is the Super Skill of discovering sharp and compact Charts and Patterns depicting Trends and Targets with Precision and Perfection.”
  15. “Identifying the “Rhythmic Flow” of Financial Instruments for skimming the crème, quietly and consistently is the fascinating nature of the Technician’s profession.”
  16. “Like any craft, such as piano playing, perfection may be elusive – I’ll never play a piece perfectly, and I’ll never buy the low and sell the high – but consistency is achievable if you practice day in and day out.”
  17. “You never need to chase a trade. The market has plenty of opportunities. The money runs out before the opportunities do.”
  18. “Good trading is a peculiar balance between the conviction to follow your ideas and the flexibility to recognize when you have made a mistake.”
  19. “Always understand the risk/reward of the trade as it now stands, not as it existed when you put the position on.”
  20. “At all levels of play the secret of success lies not so much in playing well as in not playing badly.”