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E-raamat: Dick Davis Dividend: Straight Talk on Making Money from 40 Years on Wall Street [Wiley Online]

  • Formaat: 496 pages, Tables: 52 B&W, 0 Color
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jan-2008
  • Kirjastus: John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1119198100
  • ISBN-13: 9781119198109
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Wiley Online
  • Hind: 47,58 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Formaat: 496 pages, Tables: 52 B&W, 0 Color
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jan-2008
  • Kirjastus: John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1119198100
  • ISBN-13: 9781119198109
Teised raamatud teemal:
A pioneer in the financial media, Dick Davis has interacted with the investing public for over forty years. With his new book, he continues this trend. The first part of The Dick Davis Dividend contains an easy-to-read, yet profound discussion of the essentials of investingfocusing on the savvy veterans often unconventional, core beliefs. While the second part of this engaging guide makes a compelling case for combining both passive investing via index funds and active investing via stocks and mutual funds.
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xix
About the Author xxiii
Introduction 1(1)
Can 95 Million Investors Be Wrong?
2(7)
A Challenge: Blunt Honesty without Turning Off the Investor
9(2)
Where I'm Coming From
11(7)
Housekeeping Notes
18(5)
Personal Background
23(30)
Pre-Wall Street
24(4)
One-of-a-Kind Career on Wall Street
28(19)
Post-Wall Street
47(2)
Modesty Adds Credibility
49(4)
Part One: Deepest Convictions About Successful Investing After 40 Years On Wall Street
53(198)
The Three Best Things to Have before Starting to Invest
55(12)
Luck
56(4)
Longevity
60(1)
Deep Pockets
61(6)
Six Absolutes
67(48)
Nobody Knows the Answers
67(11)
There's Always an Exact Opposite Opinion
78(3)
We're Predisposed to Fail, But Not Predestined
81(3)
There Is Symmetry in the Market
84(8)
The Market Is King---News Is Mostly Irrelevant
92(19)
The Durability of Major Trends Is Underestimated
111(4)
Seven Core Convictions
115(50)
Asset Allocation Is Key to Managing Risk
115(7)
Proper Entry Level Is Crucial
122(6)
Be Aware of the Negatives: There's Always a Column A and a Column B
128(1)
The Best You Can Do Is Put the Odds in Your Favor
129(12)
The Worst You Can Do Is Be Totally and Instantly Informed (A Critique of CNBC)
141(4)
Many Strategies Can Work---The Key Is Consistency
145(17)
Index Funds: The Answer for Most, But Not the Whole Answer
162(3)
Thirty-Five Nuggets
165(86)
After You Buy, It'll Always Go Lower
165(1)
CEOs on Their Own Stock
166(1)
Conventional Wisdom Is More Conventional than Wisdom
167(4)
Humility Is Sadly Lacking on Wall Street
171(2)
A Sure Thing If You Have the Patience
173(3)
No Single Stock Has to Be Bought
176(1)
The Sticky Question of When to Sell
176(7)
Mergers Are Good for Everyone Except Stockholders
183(2)
Get Children Started Early
185(4)
Don't Rebuke Yourself
189(3)
Face It, It's History; Put It Behind You
192(1)
Investigate, Then Invest---Hogwash
193(3)
Cramer versus Kirk
196(7)
How to Answer Questions about the Market
203(2)
Giving Advice to Relatives---Tread Lightly
205(1)
When Greed Paid Off
206(1)
Losses Are Inevitable---A Big Loss Unacceptable
207(2)
ETFs Are a Beautiful Thing
209(3)
Rising Dividends Are More Important than Big Dividends
212(3)
The Broker and the Case for Discretion
215(4)
All Investors Are Not Created Equal
219(2)
Low Commissions Make Online Trading Hard to Resist
221(1)
Understand Your Own Temperament
222(2)
The Upside-Down Stock Market
224(5)
Every Group Has Its Day
229(1)
``When'' Is More Important than ``What''
230(1)
No Place to Hide for the Investor
231(3)
The Rarity of Inside Information
234(1)
What's a Reasonable Return?
235(3)
The Market Is Typically Dull and Indecisive
238(1)
Interest Rates---The Most Difficult of All to Forecast
239(4)
The Brilliant Market Call
243(1)
Your Results Will Differ From Your Fund's
244(2)
You Can Make Money in a Down Market
246(3)
No One Has a Monopoly on the Right Answers
249(2)
Part Two: Okay, So What Do I Do With My Money?
251(204)
Active versus Passive Investing
253(32)
The 80-20 Solution
254(4)
Passive Investing---An Overview
258(6)
Index Funds: What's Most Important To Know
264(21)
Passive Investing: Twenty-Eight Model Index Fund Portfolios
285(84)
Setting the Table
285(9)
Paul Farrell: Lazy Man Portfolios
294(3)
Twenty-Eight Model Index Fund Portfolios
297(72)
Active Investing with Mutual Funds
369(24)
Ways for Do-It-Yourselfers to Outperform the Market: Introduction
370(2)
Life-Cycle/Target Retirement Funds
372(4)
Mutual Funds: 18 Key Points
376(17)
Active Investing with Stocks
393(36)
Newsletters
394(7)
``My One Favorite Stock'' Lists
401(2)
Piggybacking the Masters
403(4)
Virtual Investing
407(1)
Stock Screens
408(2)
Brokerage Focus Lists
410(1)
Stock-Picking Columnists
411(3)
The CAN SLIM Approach: William O'Neil
414(3)
The Magic Formula: Joel Greenblatt
417(3)
Jeremy Siegel's Dividend Approach
420(4)
Private Money Managers
424(1)
Best Web Sites and Blogs
425(4)
Conclusion
429(26)
Great Investment Books: The Right Kind of Homework
429(7)
Sayings and Quotations
436(11)
Wrap-Up: What I Hope You Take Away
447(8)
Index 455


Dick Davis is one of the most widely known and highly respected market commentators of his time. He founded The Dick Davis Digest in 1982, one of the nation's largest investment news-letters, and pioneered stock market reporting via television and radio. Davis also wrote a stock market column for the Miami Heraldwhich was syndicated to over 100 newspapersfor over ten years. Born in Yonkers, New York, Davis lived in Miami for forty-five years and in Boca Raton since 1992.