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SIPC.org
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Suggested Reading List
| Our
guest on the Money Matters Radio Show 11-7-04;
America the Broke :
How the Reckless Spending of
The White House and Congress
are Bankrupting OurCountry and Destroying Our
Children's Future
By: Gerald J. Swanson
“One
day soon, our government will suddenly run out
of cash, unable to meet its payments, leaving
the United States as bankrupt as any banana
republic. We are far more vulnerable than most
Americans realize. . . With a debt of $7.3 trillion,
if interest rates were to hit the levels we
saw 20 years ago, it would take every nickel
collected in income taxes just to pay the interest
on our existing debt. There would be no money
left for defense, or homeland security, or education,
or Social Security.
This
scenario is hardly fiction. That the United
States of America can literally go broke is
no longer a fantasy but likelihood—unless
we stop the train now speeding us to Armageddon.
If we do not get our financial house in order,
and soon, our great nation will collapse under
the weight of its financial obligations.
I
believe we can prevent the catastrophe. But
time is short. In the final reckoning, it’s
up to us to do what’s needed to save America’s
future.”—from America the Broke
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| Understanding
Wall Street
By: Jeffrey B. Little, Lucien
Rhodes
Of
all the books on Wall Street and the stock market
that have appeared over the years, none has
had the impact or staying power of this book.
Since it was first published in 1978, Understanding
Wall Street has been recognized as the leading
primer on the stock market. Now this unsurpassed
guide is available in a updated edition for
the 1990s. Little and Rhodes examine the effects
of the crash of 1987 and provide fresh material,
including several all-new chapters, on junk
bonds and growth stocks, program trading, gold
and silver, investor resources and services,
and international investment. Readers also learn
how to interpret business news and how to protect
themselves in a bear market. |
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| Rich
Dad, Poor Dad:
What the Rich Teach Their
Kids About Money
That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not!
By: Robert T. Kiyosaki, With Sharon L. Lechter
Personal-finance
author and lecturer Robert Kiyosaki developed
his unique economic perspective through exposure
to a pair of disparate influences: his own highly
educated but fiscally unstable father, and the
multimillionaire eighth-grade dropout father
of his closest friend. The lifelong monetary
problems experienced by his "poor dad"
(whose weekly paychecks, while respectable,
were never quite sufficient to meet family needs)
pounded home the counterpoint communicated by
his "rich dad" (that "the poor
and the middle class work for money," but
"the rich have money work for them").
Taking that message to heart, Kiyosaki was able
to retire at 47. Rich Dad, Poor Dad, written
with consultant and CPA Sharon L. Lechter, lays
out his the philosophy behind his relationship
with money. Although Kiyosaki can take a frustratingly
long time to make his points, his book nonetheless
compellingly advocates for the type of "financial
literacy" that's never taught in schools.
Based on the principle that income-generating
assets always provide healthier bottom-line
results than even the best of traditional jobs,
it explains how those assets might be acquired
so that the jobs can eventually be shed. --Howard
Rothman |
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| Stocks
for the Long Run
By: Jeremy J. Siegel, Donald
G. Coxe,
Foreword by Peter Bernstein
If
anyone told you that investing in the stock
market was the safest investment you could make,
you might raise an eyebrow. However, if Jeremy
Siegel tells you this, prepare to be convinced.
Siegel's book, Stocks for the Long Run, is a
comprehensive and highly readable history of
the stock market that dramatically makes the
case for long-term investing in stocks.
In summing up his approach
to investing, Siegel writes, "Poor investment
strategy, whether it is for lack of diversification,
pursuing hot stocks, or attempting to time the
market, often stems from the investor's belief
that it is necessary to beat the market to do
well in the market. Nothing is further from
the truth. The principle of this book is that
through time the after-inflation returns on
a well-diversified portfolio of common stocks
have not only exceeded that of fixed income
assets but have actually done so with less risk.
Which stocks you own is secondary to whether
you own stocks, especially if you maintain a
balanced portfolio." |
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Stocks
for the Long Run considers subjects as diverse as
the history of the various market indices and what
makes for a business cycle to contrarian indicators
and the utility of 200-day moving averages. If you've
just come into investing in the last few years and
feel the need for a solid and comprehensive text about
the market, Stocks for the Long Run is probably the
best primer available. It also works as an excellent
reference for seasoned investors and anyone else interested
in how the market works. --Harry C. Edwards
| Millionaire
Next Door:
The Surprising Secrets
of America's Wealthy
By: Thomas J. Stanley, William D. Danko, William
D. Danke
How
can you join the ranks of America's wealthy
(defined as people whose net worth is over one
million dollars)? It's easy, say doctors Stanley
and Danko, who have spent the last 20 years
interviewing members of this elite club: you
just have to follow seven simple rules. The
first rule is, always live well below your means.
The last rule is, choose your occupation wisely.
You'll have to buy the book to find out the
other five. It's only fair. The authors' conclusions
are commonsensical. But, as they point out,
their prescription often flies in the face of
what we think wealthy people should do. There
are no pop stars or athletes in this book, but
plenty of wall-board manufacturers--particularly
ones who take cheap, infrequent vacations! Stanley
and Danko mercilessly show how wealth takes
sacrifice, discipline, and hard work, qualities
that are positively discouraged by our high-consumption
society. "You aren't what you drive,"
admonish the authors. Somewhere, Benjamin Franklin
is smiling
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Our
guest on the Money Matters Radio Show 4-18-04;
Phil Dow, a market strategist
at RBC Dain Rauscher
Phil's
Book:
The
Citizen Investor: The Power of Ownership
by Phil Dow, Paul B. Brown
Book
Description
There are no guarantees when
it comes to investing.
And if you've heard it once, you've heard it
a thousand times, "past performance is no guarantee
of future results." And yet, year in and year
out, the same companies ouperform the pack.
They aren't flashy. And they certainly will
not generate the highest returns over one week,
one month or one year. Yet, every time you look
at the best performing stocks over a three,
five, or ten-year (or even longer) period, there
they are. Doesn't it make sense to consider
making these strong performers a core part of
your portfolio? Phil Dow, director of equity
strategy for RBC Dain Rauscher, one of the nation's
leading brokerage firms, thinks so. Here in
straight forward, no-nonsense language, Dow
shows you how to identify the market's "Bulldog
Stocks" and what you should do with them once
you find them. (Hint: You OWN them for the long
term.) If it is time to get back into the market,
or to readjust your portfolio, THE CITIZEN INVESTOR
is a great place to start. |
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Gerald
J.. Swanson, Ph.D our guest on the Money Matters
Radio Show 11-7-04;
Bankruptcy
1995: The Coming Collapse of America and How
to Stop It
by Harry E., Jr. Figgie, Gerald J.. Swanson,
Ph.D
Book
Description
Unlike David P. Calleo's more scholarly and
philosophical approach to the national debt
in his recent The Bankrupting of America ( LJ
4/1/92), this book is designed to frighten its
readers into action. The author projects that
by 1955 interest payments on the national debt
will begin to overwhelm our ability to pay that
interest. The two possible scenarios then would
be financial panic or hyperinflation. Figgie's
call to action stresses public pressure on politicians
to reduce government deficits and the national
debt. Given the book's short-term political
emphasis, libraries should carefully evaluate
the lasting significance of its long-run role
in their collection.
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