I've been wanting to talk a little more about investing here, and since we don't all have the same background I've been looking for a way to simply explain key points like asset allocation, diversification, risk and return. So as I prepared to do a little research and get things clear enough in my own head to be able to sketch out an explanation of some of them, I picked this little book, The Investment Answer by Daniel Goldie and Gordon Murray, off my shelf. My parents gave it to me last year after hearing about it on...NPR? I guess Murray was a financial guy who got a terminal diagnosis that prompted him to finally write the book he'd always meant to. When I'd gotten it I flipped through it and nodded my head at the sane, low-cost, passive approach advocated. But I didn't read it closely at the time.
Well now I am really reading it and I think it's terrific! In just 66 pages plus appendices the book neatly and carefully outlines how to choose an advisor, how and why to pick an asset allocation, how and why to diversify, how and why to choose passively over actively managed funds, how and why to rebalance. It doesn't assume any previous knowledge.
So yeah, if for example you were reading WCI's book and found the investing chapter too thin, this is the perfect gap-filler. Not intimidating, very accessible, it's laid out very simply and logically.
Ugh, yesterday when I started writing this post, it was a bargain book on Amazon for just $7! Still, today it's $9.99 for the Kindle version or about $7 plus $3 shipping for the paperback, from resellers. Not terrible.
Alternately, the Bogleheads' Guide to Investing gives the same information and much more, in about 5 times as many pages.
Anyway, hope this helps someone! Enjoy!
Well now I am really reading it and I think it's terrific! In just 66 pages plus appendices the book neatly and carefully outlines how to choose an advisor, how and why to pick an asset allocation, how and why to diversify, how and why to choose passively over actively managed funds, how and why to rebalance. It doesn't assume any previous knowledge.
So yeah, if for example you were reading WCI's book and found the investing chapter too thin, this is the perfect gap-filler. Not intimidating, very accessible, it's laid out very simply and logically.
Ugh, yesterday when I started writing this post, it was a bargain book on Amazon for just $7! Still, today it's $9.99 for the Kindle version or about $7 plus $3 shipping for the paperback, from resellers. Not terrible.
Alternately, the Bogleheads' Guide to Investing gives the same information and much more, in about 5 times as many pages.
Anyway, hope this helps someone! Enjoy!
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