Warehouse Stock Clearance Sale

Grab a bargain today!


Where Are the Customers' Yachts?
By

Rating

Product Description
Product Details

Table of Contents

Introduction xiii
Jason Zweig

Foreword to the 1995 Edition xxi
Michael Lewis

Introduction to the 1955 Bull Market Edition xxv

I. Introduction—“The Modest Cough of a Minor Poet” 3

The validity of financial predictions

The passion for prophecy

When the bull jumped over the moon

II. Financiers and Seers 23

Big banking—nice work if you can get it

Some assistant tycoons

The fruit on the blossom of thought

Wall street semantics

Chartists

The pay

The difficulties of “earning” money

An art without a muse

A little aptitude test

III. Customers—That Hardy Breed 49

Varieties of customers

How to get customers

Margin

What to do when the dam bursts

Some case histories and a diagnosis

Churning money as a career

IV. Investment Trusts—Promises and Performance 67

Stop making your own mistakes

Where is the catch?

The hell-paving construction company

The trouble with the “best” securities

The $750,000 bird

By way of apology

The magical investment corporation

V. The Short Seller—He of the Black Heart 87

For the defense

A different defense

With and without bears

Bear raiding

VI. Puts, Calls, Straddles, and Gabble 105

What options are (more or less)

In defense of the pure gamble

The catch

VII. The “Good” Old Days and the “Great” Captains 117

The i.q. of a big shot

Speculation on speculation

A brief excursion into probabilities

Down will come baby

“They”

Manipulators

A bowl of nickels

VIII. Investment—Many Questions and a Few Answers 135

Headaches of the wealthy

A little wonderful advice

Price and value—our special market letter

Cash as a long-term investment

Your way of life and the basis book

IX. Reform—Some Yeas and Nays 153

Was it stolen or did you lose it?

Nobody loves a specialist

Horizons and limits of regulation

Inconclusions

About the Author 171

About the Author

Fred Schwed Jr. was a professional trader who got out of the market after losing a bundle in the 1929 stock market crash. Years later, he published a bestselling children's book entitled Wacky, the Small Boy, and then went on to write Where Are the Customers' Yachts?

Reviews

"More than half a century on, Where Are the Customers' Yachts? Remains a fascinating read" (Money Week, July 2006) "... the book is a fun read and as relevant today as it ever was..." (Investor's Chronicle, August 2015)

Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
This title is unavailable for purchase as none of our regular suppliers have stock available. If you are the publisher, author or distributor for this item, please visit this link.

Back to top