Harriman House Free Capital: How 12 private investors made millions in the stock market
M**O
if you are expecting the recipe
it's not in there. Fun read but not enough details on the process of each investor. Didn't go deep enough.
O**E
Well worth reading!
Excellent book, well written and giving good practical examples of what has worked for these people. Very interesting.Would definitely buy a follow up book as am sure there are more stories of people doing this out there. Could have done with more than 12 examples basically.
H**K
rad it in a day. you might want to do the same
I enjoyed the book a lot. The book provides a nice cross section of independent thinkers and their take on investing.
G**D
How small guys won big in a stock market jungle
I have read many accounts of successful professional investors in many excellent books. But as a private investor I am always interested in learning success stories of small private investors who multiplied their own funds in the market using their investing acumen. I was looking for such acccounts on Net when I came across this book. The reviews looked encouraging so decided to buy it. I think I made a wise decision to buy this book. The profiled investors are just like any small investor with limited means. Many struggled with their jobs for various reasons and had to opt out of conventional career track. These people strated very small, had one or two early lucky breaks (like technology bubble gains) that gave them some funds to start. Today every one is millionaire. Some like Sushil has net worth of tens of millions british pound! Most achieved this in less than 20 years of investing. To author's credit he has selected investors who follow different investing styles. One guy is even day trader. That was grating in otherwise excellent book but otherwise rest can be termed as genuine fundamental investors.This book can serve as a great inspiration to all individual investors even if you do not want to make a career out of it. These accounts show what is feasible even for individuals. But this book is especially a source of great value to all those who want to make investing their vocation/calling, those who want to get out of corporate rat race and experience freedom, financial independence & control over their time & life ...by becoming ace investors themselves. The 12 stories written in this book are testominy to the fact that if you are "skilled enough" and have sufficient seed capital and you are frugal then full time investing can become a legitimate source of your livelihood and eventual freedom. But make no mistake that every one cannot possibly do what these guys did. Only few can be successful in stock investing to this extent and make a living managing just your own funds. In that sense these 12 guys are exceptional people no doubt. Their CAGR returns are in eye popping 25-40% range.Second edition covers the update on these guys 3 years after first edition came out. He has given update on how each one has fared from 2010 to 2013. It is notable that most of them have either beaten the bench mark indexes or matched the same performance (if that is your idea of success in investing!). One thing is clear they will accumulate millions more by the time they log out... although I am not so sure about that Day Trader.Another striking and pleasing factor for me was the realization that many of these successful investors are bottoms up value investors. It proves that value investing is not only for big shots but can also be source of wealth for small guys.Guy Thomas is himself a full time private investor and he understands nuances of investing. Although this is not a How To Get Rich manual he provides sufficient hints to the methods used by these invetsors and summarises at the end of each chapter for our benefit the wisdom and knowledge gained by each investor in his investing life. The author is good writer and the book was a fast read. I would reccoemnd this book as a must read for all those who dream of one day making personal investing their major calling. I also reccomend his blog and web site.Thanks Guy Thomas for writing this book. It was needed.Update in Oct 2021-I read this book and wrote my review just before I became a full-time private investor. It's been almost 7 years now. In the interim, I have read this book at least 3 times. Every time I got something valuable out of it. The book covers many styles. A couple of ones resonated with me because they are akin to my own style of long-term investing. After all these years and the passage of time, I still believe that this book is a Must Read for private investors for education and inspiration. I am glad I read this book.
T**R
An investment classic
This is a great book to dip into though you can certainly read it from cover to cover. I found the introductory chapter most useful to start with -- it's an excellent guide to the author's purpose and will help you to find the parts of most interest initially. The author has done extremely well to investigate and extract the thought processes and philosophies of his 12 subjects.It is apparent from these accounts that there is no Holy Grail of investment methodology. The interviewees are so diverse in temperament and methodology that it becomes evident that there are many ways of being a successful investor/trader and thus it's the person rather than the methodology that is important. These highly successful investors are all clever people, some very highly qualified academically, others not. They are all highly individualistic and able to make their own decisions, sometimes contrarian but always in their own furrow. Some from humble financial and social backgrounds, they mostly appear to have come to terms with themselves and their lifestyles reflect an equilibrium even though some of them have unenviable medical histories.The more I read this book the more it fascinates me and in that respect it's like the investment classics of Livermore, Schwager's Market Wizards, & Loeb -- every time you read it another little gem of information or idea becomes apparent. The author excels at explaining in non-jargonistic terms so much useful philosophical and financial discussion. Helpfully, he also includes some clear technical explanations for those wanting them.This book would make an excellent but modestly-priced present for anyone with an interest in trading the financial markets. Thoroughly recommended and a credit to its author who has donated his proceeds to charity.
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