How to Lose Money in the Stock Market: A Complete Guide to Not Going Broke on Wall Street

Herbert Ringold

ISBN 10: 0312396341 ISBN 13: 9780312396343
Editore: St Martins Pr, 1986
Usato Hardcover

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Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less. Codice articolo G0312396341I3N00

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Riassunto:

Argues that the small investor is bound to lose money in the stock market, and discusses brokers, investment newsletters, mutual funds, gold, bonds, commodities, indexes, and options

Product Description: Book by Ringold Herbert

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Titolo: How to Lose Money in the Stock Market: A ...
Casa editrice: St Martins Pr
Data di pubblicazione: 1986
Legatura: Hardcover
Condizione: Good
Condizione sovraccoperta: No Jacket

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Herbert Ringold
Editore: St Martins Press, 1986
ISBN 10: 0312396341 ISBN 13: 9780312396343
Antico o usato Rilegato

Da: Crappy Old Books, Barry, Regno Unito

Valutazione del venditore 5 su 5 stelle 5 stelle, Maggiori informazioni sulle valutazioni dei venditori

Hardback. Condizione: Good. How to Lose Money in the Stock Market ? A Complete Guide to Not Going Broke on Wall Street (1986) ? Herbert Ringold St. Martin?s Press ? ISBN: 0312396341 ? Condition: Good Financially alarming, physically reassuring, from Crappy Old Books Wall Street has never lacked books promising to make you rich. This is not one of them. How to Lose Money in the Stock Market is the rare, honest investment book that says the quiet part out loud: ?You are absolutely capable of wrecking your finances. Here?s how it usually happens.? Published in 1986 , smack in the era of big hair, big shoulder pads and bigger delusions about eternal bull markets, Herbert Ringold calmly walks you through the many, many ways investors separate themselves from their cash ? and how, with effort, you might avoid being one of them. It?s like a self-help book written by your future, slightly broke self, waving frantically from the other side. Condition: Good (unlike most portfolios after a ?hot tip?) When Crappy Old Books says Good , we mean: The cover is intact and respectably sharp, not peeling like a junk bond in ?87. The spine is solid with maybe a gentle crease or two ? the physical echo of past readers thinking, ?Wow, I?ve done all of these mistakes.? All pages are present and firmly attached ? no missing section that secretly explains the one actual way to get rich, no ripped-out ?don?t do this? chapter. Light, honest wear: slightly softened corners, mild age-toning, perhaps the faint aura of having spent time on the bedside table of someone who has learned things the hard way . No coffee tsunamis across the ?risk management? chapter, no margin notes shouting BUY in red biro, no evidence of having been hurled against a wall after a bad trading day. Just a tidy Good condition reminder that the market does, in fact, bite. What?s inside (besides bruised optimism)? Ringold goes through the greatest hits of financial self-sabotage , including but not limited to: Buying on tips, hunches, and vibes instead of research Confusing a bull market with your own genius Refusing to sell losers because ?they?ll come back, they have to? Overtrading, overleveraging, and generally overestimating your emotional stability Ignoring diversification because ?this one can?t miss? (it can, it will) Falling deeply in love with a stock, like it?s going to write you Valentine?s cards and pay your mortgage It?s a tour of: Fear, greed, denial, regret The psychology of investing badly And all the ways perfectly smart people behave like complete lunatics as soon as there?s a ticker symbol involved All delivered with dry humour and the clear subtext: ?You?re not special. The market has seen your type before.? 1986 Wall Street flavour? with suspicious relevance Yes, this is very much a mid-80s book: References to brokers you call on the phone like it?s a normal human activity Charts drawn with actual lines rather than ?your screen looked like this? screenshots The faint shadow of the coming 1987 crash , which this book reads like an accidental prequel to But the jokes and warnings land perfectly in the age of: Day-trading apps Meme stocks Crypto spirals And people taking financial advice from strangers with cartoon avatars Because the tech changed. The behaviour ? Not so much. Why this is perversely useful As investment books go, this one is: Weirdly practical: it shows you what failure looks like so you can stop auditioning for the role Comforting: you realise you?re not uniquely foolish, merely part of a proud, global tradition Surprisingly timeless: ?don?t risk money you can?t afford to lose? hasn?t exactly expired as a concept You can treat it as: A field guide to your own worst impulses A museum of Other People?s Mistakes (sure, keep telling yourself that) Pre-emptive therapy for anyone who has ever thought, ?It can only go up from here.? Why a Good used copy is perfect Brand new, this would feel like a warning. Second-hand, it feels like proof . From Crappy Old Books , this Good copy: H. Codice articolo 5117

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