The Investment Answer

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The Investment Answer
The-Investment-Answer.png
AuthorDaniel C. Goldie, CFA, CFP and Gordon S. Murray
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Genre Investment
Publisher Hachette Book Group (2011)
Publication date
January 25, 2011
Media typeHardcover, paperback, audiobook, eBook, Kindle
Pages96
ISBN 978-1-4555-0330-8
LC Class 2010942432

The Investment Answer, Learn to Manage Your Money & Protect Your Financial Future is a No.1 New York Times bestselling book for individual investors by Daniel C. Goldie, CFA, CFP and Gordon S. Murray. It was first released in paperback in 2010, and later published in hardcover in 2011. It is 96 pages long.

Contents

Gordon Murray, who died as the result of glioblastoma on January 15, 2011, [1] chose to co-write the book in the time he had remaining. Murray had worked in institutional trading and sales at Goldman Sachs, Credit Suisse First Boston and Lehman Brothers. He retired from Wall Street in 2002. [2]

Daniel Goldie is a fee-only registered investment advisor based in Menlo Park, California.

The book is designed around five investor decisions.

  1. The do-it-yourself decision
  2. The asset allocation decision
  3. The diversification decision
  4. The active vs. passive decision
  5. The rebalancing decision

The book is a general guide to investment and gives fundamental explanations in each chapter. The first chapter deals with using brokers. Chapter two touches on asset allocation, explaining the relationship between risk and return. Chapter three gives a basic explanation of diversification (having a mix of assets in a portfolio). Chapter four discusses active investing versus passive investing . Chapter five is about rebalancing a portfolio. Chapter six discusses how to gauge the performance of a portfolio. Chapter seven touches on hedge funds, private equity and commodities.

Key principles of the book

  1. The global capitalist system generates a positive return on capital over time.
  2. Investing broadly and cheaply in global capital markets with asset class funds and index funds is a winning strategy over the long term because global capital market returns are available to everyone overall.
  3. With a proper time horizon and discipline, investors can capture global capital market returns which should beat most active investors (who try to beat the market) with less risk.
  4. The most effective and efficient way to invest in stocks and bonds is in public equity and debt markets.
  5. Stock picking and market timing are speculation, while asset allocation, broad diversification of portfolio risk, reducing costs and staying the course are investing.

Reviews

The book has received positive reviews in The New York Times , [3] National Public Radio, [4] the Journal of Financial Planning, [5] Morningstar Advisor , [6] and The Huffington Post . [7]

Related Research Articles

Finance Academic discipline studying businesses and investments

Finance is the study and discipline of money, currency and capital assets. It is related with, but not synonymous with economics, the study of production, distribution, and consumption of money, assets, goods and services. Finance activities take place in financial systems at various scopes, thus the field can be roughly divided into personal, corporate, and public finance. In a financial system, assets are bought, sold, or traded as financial instruments, such as currencies, loans, bonds, shares, stocks, options, futures, etc. Assets can also be banked, invested, and insured to maximize value and minimize loss. In practice, risks are always present in any financial action and entities.

Passive management is an investing strategy that tracks a market-weighted index or portfolio. Passive management is most common on the equity market, where index funds track a stock market index, but it is becoming more common in other investment types, including bonds, commodities and hedge funds.

An index fund is a mutual fund or exchange-traded fund (ETF) designed to follow certain preset rules so that the fund can track a specified basket of underlying investments. While index providers often emphasize that they are for-profit organizations, index providers have the ability to act as "reluctant regulators" when determining which companies are suitable for an index. Those rules may include tracking prominent indexes like the S&P 500 or the Dow Jones Industrial Average or implementation rules, such as tax-management, tracking error minimization, large block trading or patient/flexible trading strategies that allow for greater tracking error but lower market impact costs. Index funds may also have rules that screen for social and sustainable criteria.

An exchange-traded fund (ETF) is a type of investment fund and exchange-traded product, i.e. they are traded on stock exchanges. ETFs are similar in many ways to mutual funds, except that ETFs are bought and sold from other owners throughout the day on stock exchanges whereas mutual funds are bought and sold from the issuer based on their price at day's end. An ETF holds assets such as stocks, bonds, currencies, futures contracts, and/or commodities such as gold bars, and generally operates with an arbitrage mechanism designed to keep it trading close to its net asset value, although deviations can occasionally occur. Most ETFs are index funds: that is, they hold the same securities in the same proportions as a certain stock market index or bond market index. The most popular ETFs in the U.S. replicate the S&P 500 Index, the total market index, the NASDAQ-100 index, the price of gold, the "growth" stocks in the Russell 1000 Index, or the index of the largest technology companies. With the exception of non-transparent actively managed ETFs, in most cases, the list of stocks that each ETF owns, as well as their weightings, is posted daily on the website of the issuer. The largest ETFs have annual fees of 0.03% of the amount invested, or even lower, although specialty ETFs can have annual fees well in excess of 1% of the amount invested. These fees are paid to the ETF issuer out of dividends received from the underlying holdings or from selling assets.

Investment management is the professional asset management of various securities, including shareholdings, bonds, and other assets, such as real estate, to meet specified investment goals for the benefit of investors. Investors may be institutions, such as insurance companies, pension funds, corporations, charities, educational establishments, or private investors, either directly via investment contracts or, more commonly, via collective investment schemes like mutual funds, exchange-traded funds, or REITs.

Active management is an approach to investing. In an actively managed portfolio of investments, the investor selects the investments that make up the portfolio. Active management is often compared to passive management or index investing.

A "fund of funds" (FOF) is an investment strategy of holding a portfolio of other investment funds rather than investing directly in stocks, bonds or other securities. This type of investing is often referred to as multi-manager investment. A fund of funds may be "fettered", meaning that it invests only in funds managed by the same investment company, or "unfettered", meaning that it can invest in external funds run by other managers.

Asset allocation Investment strategy

Asset allocation is the implementation of an investment strategy that attempts to balance risk versus reward by adjusting the percentage of each asset in an investment portfolio according to the investor's risk tolerance, goals and investment time frame. The focus is on the characteristics of the overall portfolio. Such a strategy contrasts with an approach that focuses on individual assets.

David Frederick Swensen was an American investor, endowment fund manager, and philanthropist. He was the chief investment officer at Yale University from 1985 until his death in May 2021.

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Diversification (finance) Process of allocating capital in a way that reduces the exposure to any one particular asset or risk

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An investment fund is a way of investing money alongside other investors in order to benefit from the inherent advantages of working as part of a group such as reducing the risks of the investment by a significant percentage. These advantages include an ability to:

References

  1. "Gordon Murray - Author and former Wall Street investment banker dies at 60". tributes.com. January 17, 2011.
  2. WRIGHT, DAVID (January 19, 2011). "Banker with Brain Tumor Dedicates Final Months to Help Average Investors". ABC News. Archived from the original on January 26, 2011. Retrieved January 25, 2011.
  3. Lieber, Ron (November 26, 2010). "A Dying Banker's Last Instructions". New York Times . Retrieved January 25, 2011.
  4. "A Dying Investment Banker Makes Best Of Odds". NPR. December 17, 2010. Retrieved April 27, 2012.
  5. Ford, Jon (November 2010). "The Investment Answer: Learn to Manage Your Money & Protect Your Financial Future". Financial Planning Association . Retrieved April 27, 2012.
  6. Simon, W. Scott (December 2, 2010). "A Wall Street veteran with terminal cancer shares his secrets". Morningstar, Inc. Retrieved April 27, 2012.
  7. Larsen, Mike (September 8, 2010). "The Investment Answer - Tiny Book Will Help Turn Your Nickel Into 6 Cents". The Huffington Post .