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Cargando... Security Analysis: Principles and Technique (1934)por Benjamin Graham, David L. Dodd
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. A hedge fund manager I know has a great way of describing the difference between growth and value investors: The growth-oriented manager will see a company with a current cash flow level of, say, one dollar and get excited about the possibility it will increase to five dollars in the near future, while the value-oriented manager will get excited if she can buy that dollar now for only fifty cents. The latter description is a perfect example of the way Graham and Dodd espouse looking at the investment world; the difference between purchase price and intrinsic value is the investor’s “margin of safety”. The writing in this volumen is occasionally ponderous and not all parts of it have aged well since its original publication in 1934—see Graham’s The Intelligent Investor for a more recent treatment of this area—but the book remains “ground zero” for any serious student of stock and bond valuation. It truly deserves to be called a classic. History of Financial Advice Collection. In Security Analysis, Benjamin Graham and David Dodd lay out their core philosophy of “value investing.” The book—probably the most influential endorsement of a “fundamental” approach to investment analysis—is clearly presented as an attempt to learn the lessons of the speculative hype and excess of the late 1920s, and to return to the common-sense basics of determining good-value investments. Central to Graham and Dodd’s approach is a company’s “earning power,” which “must imply a fairly confident expectation of certain future results.” From earning power can be derived a measure of “intrinsic value”—Graham and Dodd’s mantra, though one that they outline pragmatically: the security analyst “needs only to establish either that the value is adequate … or else that the value is considerably higher or considerably lower than the market price. For such purposes, an indefinite and approximate measure of the intrinsic value may be sufficient.” In making this estimate, the “intricacies of corporate accounting and financial policies” provide the security analyst with “unbounded opportunities for shrewd detective work.” sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Business.
Management.
Nonfiction.
Considerado el más importante consejero en inversión del siglo xx, Benjamin Graham enseñó e inspiró a financieros de todo el mundo. Security Analysis es probablemente su obra más ambiciosa. Publicada por primera vez en 1934, en ella Graham explica en profundidad los distintos tipos de valores de inversión, sus características, ventajas y desventajas, para permitir a pequeños y grandes inversores, individuales y corporativos, operar sobre una base sólida y fiable, alejada de decisiones irracionales. Es, pues, una obra técnica, impregnada de sentido común, que seguirá siendo la mano derecha de todo inversor serio durante muchos años. Esta edición, la primera en lengua española, recupera el texto de la segunda que se publicó en inglés (1940), que el propio autor revisó y comentó, complementado con interpre No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)332.63Social sciences Economics Finance Investing Personal InvestingClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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So what is left? A lot of really wise advice of the general kind (see quotes below). Unfortunately it's embedded in a very thick book and I wouldn't recommend anyone reading the whole book to pick out those advice unless they are really interested in investments, and in particular value investments and if they are, I hope they are already familiar with much of what Graham and Dodd write here. If from no other source, from [b:The Intelligent Investor|106835|The Intelligent Investor (Collins Business Essentials)|Benjamin Graham|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1409602421s/106835.jpg|102974] by the same authors. That book is much more general and easy to digest.
Some quotes from the book
The most general advice of all:
About trust in the management (Norwegian Vardia is an ongoing example of this):
About making those really great deals:
About people trying to convince by complicating things. I will paraphrase Warren Buffett - don't invest in something you don't understand:
About trusting advisors absolutely:
About being using cash as an indicator of success rather than the numbers reported:
About skepticism towards earning reports:
One that is very relevant to people tricked into buying stock in the dot com bubble:
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