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Quotes About Investing

This brief review indicates that the stock market's attitude toward secondary companies tends to be unrealistic and consequently to create in normal times innumerable instances of major undervaluation.
~ Benjamin Graham
we advised the readers to buy their stocks as they bought their groceries, not as they bought their perfume.
~ Benjamin Graham
That's why inflation is so easy to overlook—and why it's so important to measure your investing success not just by what you make, but by how much you keep after inflation.
~ Benjamin Graham
A price decline is of no real importance to the bona fide investor unless it is either very substantial- say, more than a third from cost- or unless it reflects a known deterioration of consequence in the company's position. p25
~ Benjamin Graham
He would not be far wrong if this motto read more simply: Never buy a stock immediately after a substantial rise or sell one immediately after a substantial drop. p43
~ Benjamin Graham
Growth stocks are worth buying when their prices are reasonable, but when their price/earnings ratios go much above 25 or 30 the odds get ugly:
~ Benjamin Graham
the investor's chief problem—and even his worst enemy—is likely to be himself.
~ Benjamin Graham
You must never delude yourself into thinking that you're investing when you're speculating. Speculating becomes mortally dangerous the moment you begin to take it seriously. You must put strict limits on the amount you are willing to wager.
~ Benjamin Graham
Good mortgage-bond funds are available from Vanguard, Fidelity, and Pimco. But if a broker ever tries to sell you an individual mortgage bond or "CMO," tell him you are late for an appointment with your proctologist.
~ Benjamin Graham
dollar-cost averaging," which means simply that the practitioner invests in common stocks the same number of dollars each month or each quarter.
~ Benjamin Graham
Because so few investors have the guts to cling to stocks in a falling market, Graham insists that everyone should keep a minimum of 25% in bonds. That cushion, he argues, will give you the courage to keep the rest of your money in stocks even when stocks stink.
~ Benjamin Graham
Unlike most people, many of the best professional investors first get interested in a company when its share price goes down, not up.
~ Benjamin Graham
More important, buying IPOs is a bad idea because it flagrantly violates one of Graham's most fundamental rules: No matter how many other people want to buy a stock, you should buy only if the stock is a cheap way to own a desirable business.
~ Benjamin Graham
It follows from this reasoning that the majority of security owners should elect the defensive classification. They do not have the time, or the determination, or the mental equipment to embark upon investing as a quasi-business. They should therefore be satisfied with the excellent return now obtainable from a defensive portfolio (and with even less), and they should stoutly resist the recurrent temptation to increase this return by deviating into other paths.
~ Benjamin Graham
Take the five stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average with the lowest stock prices and highest dividend yields. Discard the one with the lowest price. Put 40% of your money in the stock with the second-lowest price. Put 20% in each of the three remaining stocks. One year later, sort the Dow the same way and reset the portfolio according to steps 1 through 4. Repeat until wealthy. Over
~ Benjamin Graham
Streisand, the day-trading diva, personified the way people abuse Lynch's teachings. In 1999 she burbled, "We go to Starbucks every day, so I buy Starbucks stock." But the Funny Girl forgot that no matter how much you love those tall skinny lattes, you still have to analyze Starbucks's financial statements and make sure the stock isn't even more overpriced than the coffee.
~ Benjamin Graham
The rate of return sought should be dependent, rather, on the amount of intelligent effort the investor is willing and able to bring to bear on his task. The minimum return goes to our passive investor, who wants both safety and freedom from concern. The maximum return would be realized by the alert and enterprising investor who exercises maximum intelligence and skill.
~ Benjamin Graham
Jak jsme se pou?ili? V krátkém období se trh Grahamovým princip?m vysmívá, ale v dlouhém období se jim vždy dostane rehabilitace. Jestliže nakupujete akcie jen proto, že jejich cena roste - místo toho, abyste se ptali, zda se zvyÅ¡ue fundamentální hodnota spole?nosti-eminenta - bude vás to dÃ…â"¢íve nebo pozdÄ›ji Å¡erednÄ› mrzet. To není jen pravdÄ›podobnost. To je jistota.
~ Benjamin Graham
He should never buy a stock because it has gone up or sell one because it has gone down. He would not be far wrong if this motto read more simply: "Never buy a stock immediately after a substantial rise or sell one immediately after a substantial drop.
~ Benjamin Graham
First of all, recognize that an index fund—which owns all the stocks in the market, all the time, without any pretense of being able to select the "best" and avoid the "worst"—will beat most funds over the long run.
~ Benjamin Graham
What else should you watch for? Most fund buyers look at past performance first, then at the manager's reputation, then at the riskiness of the fund, and finally (if ever) at the fund's expenses. The intelligent investor looks at those same things—but in the opposite order.
~ Benjamin Graham
It casts some little doubt in my mind as to the complete dependability of the popular belief among analysts that prominent and promising companies will now always sell at high price-earnings ratios—that this is a fundamental fact of life for investors and they may as well accept and like it. I have no desire at all to be dogmatic on this point. All I can say is that it is not settled in my mind, and each of you must seek to settle it for yourself.
~ Benjamin Graham
The best way to measure your investing success is not by whether you're beating the market but by whether you've put in place a financial plan and a behavioral discipline that are likely to get you where you want to go. In the end, what matters isn't crossing the finish line before anybody else but just making sure that you do cross it.
~ Benjamin Graham
Each company should have a long record of continuous dividend payments. (All the issues in the Dow Jones Industrial Average met this dividend requirement in 1971.) To be specific on this point we would suggest the requirement of continuous dividend payments beginning at least in 1950.
~ Benjamin Graham