Winning the Loser's Game, Fifth Edition: Timeless Strategies for Successful Investing |
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| Title: | Winning the Loser's Game, Fifth Edition: Timeless Strategies for Successful Investing |
| Author: | Charles Ellis |
| Publisher: | McGraw-Hill |
| Type: | Book / Hardcover |
| Publication Date: | 02 October, 2009 |
| ISBN / ISBN-13: | 0071545492 / 9780071545495 |
| List Price: | $29.95 |
| You Save: | $10.18 |
| Amazon Price: | $19.77 |
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Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:
Product Description
The Classic Guide to Winning on Wall StreetâCompletely Updated and Expanded! âThe best book about investing? The answer is simple: Winning the Loserâs Game. Using compelling data and pithy stories, Charley Ellis has captured beautifully in this new and expanded edition of his classic work the most important lessons regarding investing. In today's unforgiving environment, it's a must-read!â F. William McNabb III, Chief Executive Officer and President, Vanguard âCharley Ellis has been one of the most influential investment writers for decades. This classic should be required reading for both individual and institutional investors.â Burton Malkiel, author, A Random Walk Down Wall Street âNo one understands what it takes to be a successful investor better than Charley Ellis and no one explains it more clearly or eloquently. This updated investment classic belongs on every investorâs bookshelf.â Consuelo Mack, Anchor and Managing Editor, Consuelo Mack WealthTrack âA must-reread classic, refreshed and updated with the latest âlessons to be learnedâ from the 2008-2009 market events.â Martin Leibowitz, Managing Director, Morgan Stanley Research âWinning the Loserâs Game has long been required reading for professional investors. . . . This elegant volume explores approaches for individuals such as relying on intellect rather than emotion, and building a personal portfolio by taking advantage of what other investors already know.â Abby Joseph Cohen, Goldman Sachs & Co âThis is less a book about competition than about sound money management. Sounder than Charley Ellis they do not come.â Andrew Tobias, author, The Only Investment Guide Youâll Ever Need About the Book: Peter Drucker referred to Winning the Loser's Game as âby far the best book on investment policy and management.â Now, in it's fifth edition, the investing classic has been updated and improved. With refreshing candor, straight talk, and good humor, Winning the Loserâs Game helps individual investors succeed with their investments and control their financial futures. Ellis, dubbed âWall Streetâs Wisest Manâ by Money magazine, has been showing investors for three decades how stock markets really work and what individuals can do to be sure they are long-term winners. Applying wisdom gained from half a century of working with the leading investment managers and securities firms around the world, Ellis explains how to avoid common traps and get on the road to investment success. Winning the Loserâs Game helps you set realistic objectives and develop a sensible strategy. You will learn how to: - Create an investment program based on the realities of markets
- Use the âunfairâ index fund to succeed, even in tumultuous markets
- Institute an annual review process to steer your investments well into the future
- Maximize investing success through five stages, from earning and saving through investing, estate planning, and giving
The need for a trustworthy investing guide has never been greater. Sixty million individuals with 401(k)s are now responsible for making important investment decisions. They know theyâre not experts but donât know whom to trust. Winning the Loserâs Game explains why conventional investing is a loserâs game, and how you can easily make it a winnerâs game!
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Customer Reviews:
Must Read For Those Disappointed With "professional' Money Managers
25 March, 2008
Ellis exposes the money managers who claim they can buy a security for you cheap, let it rise up, and then sell just before it drops. The real truth that Ellis lets us in on is that these people don't know anymore than anyone else, and what REALLY effects the markets are random events that nobody can predict. He also shows that the money managers really only make money buy churning transactions, no matter how high or low a security is. He returns us to finance 101 that tells us MARKETS are efficient, trying to time the market is not.
- Amazon Customer Review
Market Efficiency Debate Made Clear In This Classic...
03 July, 2009
The debate over Market Efficiency usually destructs because the term "Market Efficiency" can really have two meanings: (1) Prices are Rational and/or (2) that investors can't consistently beat the market. "Winning the Loser's Game" is the classic that gives the philosophical underpinnings for what is born out by the empirical evidence: the markets are efficient from the 2nd perspective - investors can't consistently beat the market. If you think you can beat the market then you have to assume that you know something that all the other smart people don't know and that you can consistenly capitalize on it. Excellent read and implemented well on the Kindle. A good one to have for your intellectual tool-kit. However, would purchase and read Bernstein's "Against the Gods" first...
Just my two cents...
- Amazon Customer Review
An Investment Classic Returns
06 December, 2009
Ancient Greek lore tells us of Sisyphus who was banished to the underworld to push a heavy stone up a steep hill. Approaching the top of the hill, the stone would tumble to the bottom whereupon he would begin his labors anew. Poor Sisyphus was condemned to repeat this cycle for eternity.
Today's investors can be excused for feeling a bit like Sisyphus. We have been dutifully adding to our investments over the years and watching our portfolios grow nicely. But just as the outlines of a comfortable retirement begin looming on the horizon, the bottom of the market falls out, our portfolio values plummet, and, like Sisyphus, we are forced to start over. Unfortunately, we are a few years older and, unlike Sisyphus, we do not have eternity to make things right. Time appears to be running out.
Out of fear or disgust or both, many of us have bailed out of the stock market, locked in losses, and vowed never to return. We have placed our remaining funds in CDs, US Government securities, or short-term bonds. A recent Wall Street Journal article described a nascent trend to return to the soil - people buying farmland, determined to lead a rural lifestyle with the goal of becoming self-sufficient. No matter what happens in the capital markets, you always have your land and the ability to grow food on it. Well, before you throw in the towel and retreat to CDs or Green Acres, you owe it to yourself to read the new 5th edition of Charles Ellis' investment classic "Winning the Loser's Game." Understand why you have had a bad investment experience and what you may have done to make it worse. Retreating to conservative investments or the rural life will likely give rise to a different set of problems that could leave you facing more disappointment down the road.
I sensed four principle themes running through this book: (1) there has been a fundamental change in the stock market over the past fifty years which has made consistently beating the market increasingly improbable; (2) inflation is the biggest obstacle standing between you and financial security; (3) regression to the mean is a powerful force in the markets and must be factored into your investment decisions; and (4) focusing on short-term results often leads to long-term underperformance.
Author Ellis points out that individual investors accounted for about 90% of stock market trading volume during the 1950s and 60s. In those days, savvy professionals could easily outperform amateurs and rightly claim that they could beat the market. But since the 1980s, institutional investors have come to dominate and the old 90-10 ratio was reversed. Today over 90% of stock market trading volume is by institutional investors, not individuals. Professionals are essentially trading with each other and it is their activity which sets market prices. As Ellis points out, these pros are highly educated, hard working, richly compensated, and extremely competitive. They are focused on the market 24/7. It is unrealistic to believe that individuals trading from home can compete with these pros. Trying to do so is playing a loser's game, hence the title of this book. In such an environment, the best way to play is to not try to beat 'em, but to join 'em. This is one of the principle reasons why so many investment gurus recommend low cost index funds for small investors. Let the institutions compete with each other and set stock prices. You just go along for the ride. In the recent debacle, how many individuals made matters worse by trying too hard to beat the market? If you purchase shares of stock, how confident would you be of your decision if you learned that someone at Goldman Sachs sold them to you? Or if you sell shares, would you harbor second thoughts if you learned that someone at JP Morgan was buying them?
We all hope for a long retirement. But Ellis presents us with a sobering statistic, namely that during a 25 to 30-year time frame a relatively modest 3% inflation rate will cut our purchasing power in half. If you have ever observed retirees suffering a slowly declining standard of living, you likely have seen first-hand the damage wrought by inflation. Therefore, it is a focus on beating inflation, not the daily dance of stock prices, that should be your main concern. And it is a focus on the former, not the latter, that separates truly long term investors from the rest of us. This is one of the important lessons the author tries to drive home. Ellis reminds us that, historically, stocks have provided the best real (after inflation) returns compared to most other asset classes. So, as odious as stocks may be to you right now, the prospect of future inflation forces you to consider at least some exposure to the stock market. Bear in mind that with currently low interest rates and an economy flooded with dollars to stimulate economic activity, the likelihood of significant future inflation is greater than it has been in many years.
Regression to the mean is another way of stating the old saw, "what goes up, must come down." It is a statistical phenomenon that has been observed in many fields, not just investing. You could almost describe it as a law of nature. Yet how many of us, giddy with delight at rising stock prices, trust that our stocks, like Jack's beanstalk, will grow to the sky. When lofty stock prices inevitably come tumbling down, we accuse the market of betraying us. We conclude that we have been manipulated by powerful interests out to exploit us; that stock market investing is no better than gambling. So we cash out and vow never to return. Charles Ellis sees this irrational behavior arising from a lack of education. He admonishes you to teach yourself about stock market history so you will not be blindsided by adverse market events. Educating yourself should enable you to recognize that it is unduly high stock prices that should alarm you, and that stocks offer the best opportunity for decent future returns following a market decline, not a rise. When you are instructed to periodically re-balance your portfolio, you will be more prone to take this advice seriously because you know that it takes advantage of regression to the mean.
Another one of the many lessons that Charles Ellis has to teach us is the importance of asset allocation. We are lead astray when we focus on short-term fluctuations in the value of our portfolios. The most significant determinant of our future success is how we distribute our savings across different asset classes, not our specific investments nor their performance yesterday, last month, or last year. The author constantly reminds us that investing is not a competition. It does not matter one whit who we beat or who beats us. Only our personal needs and goals matter. All else is distraction. That's why oft-published performance rankings prove to have such limited value and can be harmful when they lead people to continually question their investment program. If this book can stop you from chasing performance by hop-scotching from one investment to another, the price will have been well worth it.
In a new chapter prepared for the 5th edition titled "Disaster - Again," the author discusses the recent market debacle. He admits that while he did see dark clouds forming on the horizon, he never anticipated the magnitude of the market decline. This forced him to do some soul-searching and he thought hard about the investment principles he had been espousing for many years. Had he missed something? Was he giving sound advice? Not to worry. He claims to be more convinced than ever that the core investment principles he discusses in his book have not been discredited by the events of 2008 and should serve investors well going forward.
Charles Ellis has enjoyed a successful investment career that has spanned nearly 50 years. One must presume that he didn't write this newest edition because he needs the money. He readily concedes that life has blessed him with good fortune and he feels a responsibility to return the favor by helping others. I was impressed with author's humility. To me at least, he comes across as a true teacher, not a salesman. I always feel that it is a privilege to have the opportunity to listen to someone who has learned important life lessons and is willing to share those lessons with others. This is especially important when it comes to investing for the future. Our time is limited. We don't have too many years to recover from mistakes. Learn the lessons in this book and you should be able to not only withstand the sometimes severe contractions that occur in the capital markets, but also to recognize adversity as an opportunity to buy low. You will emerge with a stronger portfolio and, unlike Sisyphus, you will not be condemned to perennially start over.
- Amazon Customer Review
Winning The Loser's Game
25 June, 2009
Generally good. Repetitious at times. Good companion book to others. I wouldn't use it as a sole source. I would recommend under these terms.
- Amazon Customer Review
The Long View
04 March, 2010
Nutshell review - In the few hours it will take you to read this book you can save yourself a lifetime of financial trouble. If you think you can beat the market, think again. It's not about whether you can beat the market now, or for a few years running. The question is can you beat the market in the long run and after adjusting for the risks taken. Can you consistently outperform all the other investors, most of whom are institutional investors with every conceivable resource at their fingertips? This is really the point Charles Ellis makes in this well written and presented book. If you are investing in the markets then you owe it to yourself to read this book. Even if you are not convinced then at least you will be better informed of the challenges that await you. Good read, worth owning.
Definitely also read (1) The Black Swan and Fooled by Randomness both by Nassim Nicholas Taleb, and (2) The The (MIS)Behaviour of Markets by Benoit B. Mandelbrot.
- Amazon Customer Review
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