The Money GameOpen Road Media, 2015 M05 26 - 253 páginas “The best book there is about the stock market”—timeless investing basics by the host of the Emmy Award–winning show Adam Smith’s Money World (The New York Times Book Review). This essential book takes readers to the Street to learn about the intricacies of money and how the stock market impacts every area of our lives. According to the author, the key to making wise, lucrative investments is knowing ourselves. In witty, easily accessible language, he shares pithy insights about the role of intuition and the psychology of guilt, arguing that there is no substitute for information. Smith’s Irregular Rules shatter common myths and misconceptions, revealing why nothing works all the time and illustrating how greed and fear fuel the market. Readers will learn about the safest types of investing, the key to following market trends, and how to capitalize growth, gleaning tips on stock movers, winners and losers, and much more. Peppered with entertaining and prescient anecdotes, The Money Game analyzes who makes the really big money and explores the meaning of our desire to become rich. From selling short and buying long to Wall Street’s crowd mentality, from what constitutes a random walk to why timing is everything, this is the definitive portrait of the Street, then and now. |
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... Wall Street,” the Wall Street Journal headlined, in some wonder. Irrational? When its language was built upon numbers, the very essence of rationality? It did seem an odd idea, even as the accounting boards worried about all the ...
... Wall Street,” the Wall Street Journal headlined, in some wonder. Irrational? When its language was built upon numbers, the very essence of rationality? It did seem an odd idea, even as the accounting boards worried about all the ...
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... Wall Street that Wall Streeters themselves believe. (The Street runs on oral-aural communication anyway, like McLuhan's global village.) The reason for this is that the writers about the Street are Outside, and Wall Street tells them ...
... Wall Street that Wall Streeters themselves believe. (The Street runs on oral-aural communication anyway, like McLuhan's global village.) The reason for this is that the writers about the Street are Outside, and Wall Street tells them ...
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... Wall Street . The new publication did not come to pass , and the editor of New York magazine , in the Sunday World Journal , scooped up my sample and ran it . ( The World Journal was a newspaper in New York which has since joined its ...
... Wall Street . The new publication did not come to pass , and the editor of New York magazine , in the Sunday World Journal , scooped up my sample and ran it . ( The World Journal was a newspaper in New York which has since joined its ...
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... Wall Street , by and large they have succeeded . Dr. Schelling's phrasing has to be counted as unfortunate , and in no sense is the stock market a great gambling enterprise like a lottery . But it is an exercise in mass psychology , in ...
... Wall Street , by and large they have succeeded . Dr. Schelling's phrasing has to be counted as unfortunate , and in no sense is the stock market a great gambling enterprise like a lottery . But it is an exercise in mass psychology , in ...
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... Wall Street was relatively unpopular; that generation's working years run from 1929 to 1946. In 1937, the year the first lonely band of security analysts huddled together, only three members of the graduating class of the Harvard ...
... Wall Street was relatively unpopular; that generation's working years run from 1929 to 1946. In 1937, the year the first lonely band of security analysts huddled together, only three members of the graduating class of the Harvard ...
Contenido
Can Ink Blots Tell You Whether You Are the Type Who Will Make a Lot of Money | |
Is the Market Really a Crowd? | |
A Cuddling Comsat | |
Mr Smith Admits His Biases | |
Can Footprints Predict the Future? | |
What the Hell Is a Random Walk? | |
But What Do the Numbers Mean? | |
Why Are the Little People Always Wrong? | |
The Cult of Performance | |
Poor Grenville Charley and the Kids | |
The Cocoa Game | |
My Friend the Gnome of Zurich Says a Major Money Crisis Is On Its | |
If All the Half Dollars Have Disappeared Is Something Sinister Gaining on | |
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Adam Smith adding machine Airlines Albert says anyway asked Bank bear market believe better bought broker called capital cash cents Charley says chart Chartists cocoa Comsat couple crowd currency Digital Datawhack earnings everything feel fifty fund managers Gnome of Zurich goes going gold growth gunslingers happened Harry’s hedge fund hundred idea investment investors Irwin Jack Dreyfus Keynes look lunch marketplace Marvin million dollars Mister Johnson Money Game Motorola move never nice ounces paper percent play players Polaroid Poor Grenville portfolio manager problems professional profits psychiatrist random walk rational Robert Scarsdale security analysts sell Sidney silver smart sold Solitron speculators stock market talk tape tell thing thousand trading Treasury trying Uncle Harry Wall Street Winfield Xerox York Stock Exchange Zilch