The Aggressive Conservative Investor

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John Wiley & Sons, Nov 4, 2005 - Business & Economics - 480 pages
"The Aggressive Conservative Investor will never go out of date. Regulation, disclosure, and other things may change, but the general approach and mindset to successful investing are timeless. Read this book and you will learn the rudiments of 'safe and cheap' investing. An essential read for every amateur and professional investor."
--Stan Garstka, Deputy Dean & Professor in the Practice of Faculty & Management, Yale School of Management

"Security analysis toward both better odds and higher long-term payoff: A readable, authoritative guide."
--Professor Bill Baumol, New York University

"In reading this book, one is struck by the simplicity of the ideas and the dependence of the investor on his own understandings of reality as opposed to the myths on the street. The updated version of this 1979 classic incorporates all the modern financial engineering that has occurred as a product of the late 20th century, and the new methodologies refine your abilities to measure risk but don't change the fundamentals of value. The updated version of The Aggressive Conservative Investor is very much a value-added proposition."
--Sam Zell, Chairman, Equity Group Investment LLC

"I concur with those people who regard Marty Whitman as the 'Dean of Value Investing.' This book is a must-read for everyone interested in understanding the art of investing."
--Melvin T. Stith, Dean, Whitman School of Management, Syracuse University

This no-holds-barred presentation of one of the most successful investment strategies of all time -- value investing in distressed securities/companie -- shows you how to analyze and evaluate stocks just like controlling owners. Based on the assumption that stock price rarely reflects real value, authors Whitman and Shubik use numerous case studies to present risk-minimizing methods that also provide high rewards. Still relevant today, this classic work includes a new introduction discussing the dramatic changes that have taken place in the value investing world since its first publication in 1979.

 

Contents

FOREWORD
xiii
SECTION
3
SECTION
39
SECTION THREE
81
SECTION FOUR
145
12 Net Asset Values
189
13Earnings
209
and Portfolio Management
220
Company Point of View
236
Prearbitrage and Postarbitrage
255
Introduction to Appendixes I and II 269
273
Leasco Data Processing Company
319
What They AreWhat They Tell
341
FinancialIntegrity ApproachPro and Con
358
Copyright

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About the author (2005)

MARTIN J. WHITMAN is Chairman and co-CIO of Third Avenue Management LLC. Mr. Whitman has taught courses in value investing and distressed investing for the past thirty years at Yale University's School of Management. He has also taught classes at Syracuse University's Whitman School of Management, which is named in his honor.

MARTIN SHUBIK, PHD, is the Seymour H. Knox Professor of Mathematical Institutional Economics at Yale University.

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