Stocks for the Long Run by Jeremy J. Siegel

Stocks for the Long Run



Stocks for the Long Run ebook




Stocks for the Long Run Jeremy J. Siegel ebook
Page: 314
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Companies
Format: pdf
ISBN: 007058043X, 9780070580435


A book review of Stocks For The Long Run, written by Jeremy J. In his book, Stocks for the Long Run, Wharton Professor Jeremy Siegel proves that stocks have been the best performing investing for the past 200 years in the US. For the last few years we have been poking fun (hopefully in a good-natured way) at the book Stocks for the Long Run. Jeremy Siegel is a professor at the University of Pennsylvania who wrote one of the most popular investment books of all time: Stocks for the Long Run. Siegel, is a great book that as the name suggests, promotes the superior return of stocks over an extended period of time. The fact is, for investors, in the long run we're all dead, as Keynes said. January 23, 2013 admin aviateVIEWS, 0. From <>: Are Stocks Still Good for the Long Run?: Stocks, we have been told again and again through the years, are the best long-term investment. An article by Steve Cebalt on the false victory of the Dow Jones Industrail Average (DJIA) hitting a new all-time high. This chart comes via David Rosenberg at Gluskin Sheff. About halfway through this historic. Rosenberg tops it off with this commentary: While we are “underweight” equities as an asset c. Bonds benefited from the “lost decade” in stocks, which experienced two bear markets in the past 11 years. Even on a day when the SPDR Gold Trust, an ETF that tracks the metal's price, ended virtually unchanged, the Market Vectors ETF Trust Gold Miners shed more than 4.5% in a sharply falling broader stock market. Below is excellent advice for everyone from my favorite professor of finance - click the link below. Remember how once upon a time long-term investors used to ridicule company managers who seemed to have their eyes fixed no further into the future than the. If you get the chance read Jeremy Siegel's masterly analysis of the Nifty Fifty in his book; “Stocks for the long run”. Historical evidence suggests that the "Dividend Sweet Spot" is a yield between 3-6%, with higher yielding stocks producing lower long-run average returns.

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