Includes bibliographical references (pages 247-248) and index.
Developing a winning plan.-Mastering your emotions.-Doing your homework.-Building a diversified portfolio.-Managing your money.-What to buy.-Trading tactics.-Getting help.-Trading pitfalls.
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Sincere's family has been investing for three generations. His grandfather started one of Chicago's early brokerage houses; Michael is an adjunct instructor at Florida University and invests on his own. His investment lessons, however, came the hard way. Several years ago, he took a big loss. As a result, he began reading everything he could find on investing, and he sought the advice of professional money managers and financial experts. These '101 lessons' are what he learned. Sincere goes Gene Walden's 100 Ways to Beat the Market (1998) one better, although the advice is basically the same. In addition, Sincere's 'wizards' slightly outnumber Jack Schwager's Market Wizards (1989). Sincere distills tips from three dozen experts and sketches profiles of 20 of them. His lessons cover setting an investment strategy, mastering the emotional aspects of investing, researching the market, building a diversified portfolio, managing money, making decisions, employing trading tactics, getting assistance, and identifying pitfalls. All told, Sincere offers sound advice at a bargain price. - David Rouse; 224p-
101 investment lessons from the wizards of Wall Street.
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Investment lessons from the wizards of Wall Street
One hundred one investment lessons from the wizards of Wall Street
Corporations-- Valuation-- United States.
Monetary policy-- United States.
Securities industry-- United States.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS-- Investments & Securities-- Stocks.