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Wealth Without Worry: The Methods of Wall Street Exposed
by Jim Whiddon with Lance Alston
What Wall Street says and does, and where it leads, most investors blindly follow. Wealth Without Worry is not for those followers. It is for investors who have always suspected that Wall Street is only interested in promoting a system that benefits itself first.
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Money, A Memoir
by Liz Perle
There’s a direct correlation between how well a woman takes care of herself financially and how well she feels about herself. So claims Perle’s book, an exploration of how women spend, ignore and feel about one of the world’s most important and controversial subjects: money.
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The Battle for the Soul of Capitalism
by John Bogle
This book tells not just a story about what went wrong but, more important, the story of why we lost our way and of how we can right our course. Bogle argues for a return to a governance structure in which owners’ capital that has been put at risk is used in their interests rather than in the interests of corporate and financial managers.
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Confessions of a Wall Street Analyst
by Dan Reingold
Reingold, a prominent Wall Street analyst from 1989 to 2003, sets out to give a first-person narrative about business fraud and scandal. He claims the book’s contents are true, and unfair and often-illegal use of inside information continues. He believes that the average investor can never win the stock-market game, which belongs to the insiders.
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The Coming Generational Storm
by Laurence Kotlikoff and Scott Burns
In 2030, as 77 million baby boomers hobble into old age, there will be twice as many retirees as there are today but only 18 percent more workers. According to Kotlikoff and Burns, if our government continues the course it has set, we’ll see skyrocketing tax rates, drastically lower retirement and health benefits, high inflation, a rapidly depreciating dollar, unemployment, and political instability. Kotlikoff and Burns propose bold new policies, including meaningful reforms of Social Security, and Medicare.
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Take on the Street
by Arthur Levitt
Investors today are being fed lies and distortions, are being exploited and neglected. A culture of gamesmanship has grown among corporate management, financial analysts, brokers, and fund managers, making it hard to tell financial fantasy from reality, salesmanship from honest advice. Levitt, former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, shows how you can take matters into your own hands.
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Who Really Cares: America’s Charity Divide
by Arthur Brooks
Charity matters—not just to the givers and to the recipients, but to the nation as a whole. It is crucial to our prosperity, happiness, health, and our ability to govern ourselves as a free people. In Who Cares, Brooks outlines who gives, who doesn’t and suggests strategies for expanding the ranks of givers, for the good of all Americans.
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Does Your Broker Owe You Money?
by Daniel R. Solin
Millions of investors may be victims of broker fraud. Are you one of them? Can you recover your losses? Daniel Solin explores various was that brokers have cheated their clients and he discuss ways to reclaim your lost money.
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The Little Book of Common Sense Investing
by John Bogle
John Bogle’s latest reiterates that investing is really just common sense. The real formula for investment success, he says, is to own the entire market, while significantly minimizing the costs of financial intermediation.
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Devil Take the Hindmost
by Edward Chancellor
Devil Take the Hindmost is an original and challenging history of stock-market speculation from the seventeenth century to the present day. Through vivid accounts of the speculative activities (wise and unwise) of investors ranging from Daniel Defoe and Benjamin Disraeli to Ivan Boesky and Hillary Rodham Clinton, Edward Chancellor shows that speculation is not driven solely by the desire to make money–by fear and greed–but springs from a wider range of human compulsions and aspirations.
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The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth
by Benjamin Friedman
Friedman, the William Joseph Maier Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University, presents a persuasive, wide-ranging argument that broadly distributed economic growth provides benefits far beyond the material: creating and strengthening democratic institutions, establishing political stability, fostering tolerance, and enhancing opportunity.
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Random Walk Down Wall Street: Including a Life-Cycle Guide to Personal Investing
by Burton Malkiel
An unconventional guide to investing in Wall Street tells how to put together a broad portfolio of stocks through sidestepping the experts and how to rate the potential of a stock, bond, money market fund, or other investment.
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Myths, Lies and Downright Stupidity: Get Out The Shovel - Why Everything You Know is Wrong
by John Stossel
Investigative reporter for ABC’s 20/20, Stossel is well known for his impatient "Give Me a Break" reports. In a writing style similar to his television personality, Stossel’s book debunks several popular misconceptions from media bias to world overpopulation. He presents a series of "myths" and then deploys an investigative journalism shovel to unearth "truth."
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Capital Ideas
by Peter L. Bernstein
When the 1974 recession hit Wall Street, investment professionals desperately turned to academia to help regain the value of their clients’ holdings. Bernstein shows how Wall Street finally embraced the advances wrought in academic seminars and technical journals that ultimately transformed the art of investing.
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The Number
by Lee Eisenberg
Eisenberg believes "the number"—the amount of money and resources people will need to enjoy the life they desire, especially post-career—is as much about self-worth as it is net worth. The Number is not an investment guide, but a look at how to get a grip on our most common financial and emotional conflicts.
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Against the Gods : The Remarkable Story of Risk
by Peter L. Bernstein
What is it that distinguishes the thousands of years of history from what we think of as modern times? This is the question Peter L. Bernstein asks in the beginning of his new book, Against the Gods, and the answer put simply is…risk management.
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Winning the Loser’s Game
by Charles D. Ellis
Ellis’s book is considered by many to be a classic analysis of investing, with the premise that individual investors can achieve far greater success working with financial markets than against them, one that has grown increasingly popular in today’s hard-to-predict markets. The latest edition offers updated strategies to leverage the power of time and compounding, protect against down cycles, and more.
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Understanding ERISA, An Eight Step Guide For Trustees and Advisors
by Reinhardt Werba Bowen
This booklet offers a framework for assisting advisors and trustees in the development of a system which will fulfill their fiduciary obligations. The standards outlined in this booklet will aid trustees in attaining the greatest value for their plans.
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The Paradox of Choice
by Barry Schwartz
We normally assume in America that more options will make us happier, but Schwartz shows the opposite is true, arguing that having all these choices actually goes so far as to erode our psychological well-being. Part research summary, part introductory social sciences tutorial, part self-help guide, this book offers concrete steps on how to reduce stress in decision making.
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Restatement of the Law, 3rd, Trusts: Prudent Rule
by The American Law Institute
Must read for all trust fiduciaries, retirement plan sponsors, advisors, etc. This recent restatement of the Prudent Investor Rule recognizes the contributions of Modern Portfolio Theory, indexing, and asset class diversification. Ignorance of the law is no excuse!
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In Defense of Globalization
by Jagdish Bhagwati
Bhagwati takes on the critics, revealing that globalization, when properly governed, is in fact the most powerful force for social good in the world today, writing that globalization actually often alleviates many of the problems for which it has been blamed. Anyone who wants to understand what’s at stake in the globalization wars must read In Defense of Globalization.
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The E Myth Revisited
by Michael Gerber
In this bestseller, Mr. Gerber dispels the myths of starting a business and shows how commonplace assumptions can get in the way of running a business. He draws the distinction between working on your business and working in your business.
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The Wall Street Self-Defense Manual: A Consumer’s Guide to Intelligent Investing
by Henry Blodget
"This book won’t tell you how to pick stocks. It won’t tell you how to get rich quick. It won’t tell you how to whip Warren Buffett in your spare time. What this book will tell you is how to be a smarter investor. It will tell you why you shouldn’t try to pick stocks, get rich quick, or whip Warren Buffett."
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On Your Own
by Alexandra Armstrong and Mary Donahue
Profiles four composite women in different life situations and follows each as she deals with grief and loneliness, organizes her finances, works with financial advisors, develops a budget and investment plan, and protects her assets.
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When Washington Shut Down Wall Street
by William Silber
The outbreak of WWI in 1914 yielded a gold outflow the jeopardized America’s reputation with creditor nations and sent the world market value of the dollar into a tailspin. Enter Treasury Secretary William McAdoo, lawyer turned financier, who closed the New York Stock Exchange for four months, beginning on July 31, 1914. Silber follows McAdoo’s trials and tribulations as he creates the Federal Reserve and averts disaster with a clinical, well-sourced narrative.
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On The Wealth of Nations
by P.J. O’Rourke
While irreverently dissecting Adam Smith’s 18th-century antimercantilist classic, The Wealth of Nations, O’Rourke continues the dogged advocacy of free-market economics of his own books, such as Eat the Rich. His analysis renders Smith’s opus more accessible, while providing the perfect launching pad for O’Rourke’s opinions on contemporary subjects.
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