- Preface ix
- Chapter 1: Your Brain ]Training Guide 1 Wall Street s Contrarian Contradiction 4 The Curmudgeon s Conundrum 5 There Is Always a But 6 Why Most Investors Are Mostly Wrong Most of the Time 8 The First Rule of True Contrarianism 12 The All-Seeing Market 13 Different, Not Opposite 14 The Right Frame of Mind 15 Check Your Ego 16
- Chapter 2: For Whom the Bell Curve Tolls 19 Wall Street s Useless/Useful Fascination With Calendars 23 Professional Groupthink 25 How the Contrarian Uses Professional Forecasts 26 Even the Best Fall Sometimes ... 30 How to Beat the Street 39
- Chapter 3: Dracula and the Four Horsemen of the Media Apocalypse 47 The Media s Flawed Financial Eyesight 50 Dracula Around the Corner 53 Looking for Growth in All the Wrong Places 59 The Magic Indicator 62 War What Is It Good For? 71 Don t Be a Cow, Be a Contrarian 77
- Chapter 4: Not in the Next 30 Months 81 Baby Boomer Bomb? 85 What About Social Security and Medicare? 86 But What if the Lost Generation Stays Lost? 90 What About Debt? 93 But What if Debt Causes Runaway Inflation? 98 But What if America Stops Innovating? 98 But What About Global Warming? 100 What About Income Inequality? 102 What if the Dollar Loses Its Place as the World s Reserve Currency? 105 What the Markets Know 108
- Chapter 5: Take a Safari With Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau 111 How the Elephant Got Its Tusks 114 Dumbo, Gross Margins and Other High ]Flying Elephants 116 When Good News Dresses Up as Bad News 118 The Yield Curve Curveball 121 When Elephants Attack 127 A Brief History of Tragedy 127 When Textbooks Lie 129 It Can t Be an Elephant If
- 134
- Chapter 6: The Chapter You ll Love to Hate 137 Step
- 1: Ditch Your Biases 140 My Guy Is Best, Your Guy Is Worst and Other Unhelpful Opinions 141 A Magical Elephant Named Gridlock 145 (Not) Just a Bill Sittin on Capitol Hill 150 That Which Is Seen and That Which Is Unseen 156 What s Worse Than a Politician? 158 Why the Government Already Made the Next Crisis Worse 162
- Chapter 7: Put Those Textbooks Away 169 Don t Toss Your Textbooks But Know Their Limitations! 172 The First Commandment: P/Es Aren t Predictive 175 The CAPEd Crusader Is No Superhero 178 Small Beats All? 181 Fancy Formulas and Other Academic Kryptonite 184 Theory Isn t Reality 189 If Not School, Where? 193
- Chapter 8: Throw Away This Book! 197 Miley Cyrus, Justin Bieber and Pop Star Economists 200 Classics Are Classic for a Reason 203 Philosophy and Econ 101 209 How to Learn From the Legends 216 Those Who Forget History ... 225 Classics in the Twenty ]First Century 230
- Chapter 9: When Miley Cyrus Meets Ben Graham: Misadventures in Behavioral Finance 235 Where It All Began 238 The Beginnings of Behavioral Finance s Drift 240 When Academics Met Capitalism and Marketing 240 Behavioral Finance and Tactical Positioning 242 Recency Bias and Sentiment 251 How to Gain a Tactical Advantage With Behavioral Finance 254 A Section for Stock Pickers 259 Know When to Say When 266 Getting Back to Self ]Control 268
- Chapter 10: The Negative Myopic Media 277 How to Use the News 281 What the Media Always Misses 285 In Technology (and Capitalism) We Trust 289 Parting Thoughts 290 Index 293.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
Train your brain to be a real contrarian and outsmart the crowd Beat the Crowd is the real contrarian s guide to investing, with comprehensive explanations of how a true contrarian investor thinks and acts and why it works more often than not. Bestselling author Ken Fisher breaks down the myths and cuts through the noise to present a clear, unvarnished view of timeless market realities, and the ways in which a contrarian approach to investing will outsmart the herd. In true Ken Fisher style, the book explains why the crowd often goes astray and how you can stay on track. Contrarians understand how headlines really affect the market and which noise and fads they should tune out. Beat the Crowd is a primer to the contrarian strategy, teaching readers simple tricks to think differently and get it right more often than not. * Discover the limits of forecasting and how far ahead you should look * Learn why political controversy matter less the louder it gets * Resurrect long-forgotten, timeless tricks and truths in markets * Find out how the contrarian approach makes you right more often than wrong A successful investment strategy requires information, preparation, a little bit of brainpower, and a larger bit of luck. Pursuit of the mythical perfect strategy frequently lands folks in a cacophony of talking heads and twenty-four hour noise, but Beat the Crowd cuts through the mental clutter and collects the pristine pieces of actual value into a tactical approach based on going against the grain.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)