All Consuming


Items pbundon consumed in…

January, 2006



  1. Sunday 8
    0684859386

    Finished consuming…
    Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes And How To Correct Them — 1 person

    Worth consuming! Tagged: best financial books


  2. Monday 9
    0385484917

    Finished consuming…
    Buffett — 2 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: best financial books


  3. Friday 20
    037550317x

    Finished consuming…
    When Genius Failed — 1 person

    Worth consuming! Tagged: best financial books


Entries about these items

    037550317x

    A story about "When Genius Failed : The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management" — 3 years ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    This is an interesting look into the financial lanscape of the 1990’s. Lowenstein places you in the midst of John Meriwether’s bond arbitrage group at Salomon just as JM is leaving to start LTCM. It details the relationships between LTCM and the large banks and shows how the large banks’ unwillingness to forgo any potential profit from LTCM led them to cave into it’s demands for higher and higher amounts of leverage on it’s trades – the major contributor to LTCM’s meltdown.

    0385484917

    A story about "Buffett: The Making of an American Capitalist" — 3 years ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    I really enjoyed reading about Warren’s early days and the startup of his limited partnership. I’ve been reading Rise and Fall of LTCM lately and I found it fascinating to read accounts of these events from multiple viewpoints. This biography also adds some context to Warren Buffett’s actions and investment decisions. An interesting account of an interesting life.

    0684859386

    A story about "Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes And How To Correct Them: Lessons From The New Science Of Behavioral Economics" — 4 years ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    This book was quite interesting. It explores human psychology and how it leads to unforced errors in our financial decisions. It exposes a few examples of Munger’s mental shortcuts that can cause us much grief in our analysis. This is a great book for people that make mistakes with money but can’t understand why they do it. I certainly do not think about money in the same way as the people in his examples. for example, I never spend more when paying with credit instead of cash and I never spend my tax refund as “found money”.


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