Tan KW
Publish date: Fri, 02 Aug 2013, 09:48 AM
Tan KW
0 502,797
Good.

Jim Rogers:

“The best advice I ever got was on an airplane. It was in my early days on Wall Street. I was flying to Chicago, and I sat next to an older guy. 

Anyway, I remember him as being an old guy, which means he may have been 40. He told me to read everything. If you get interested in a company and you read the annual report, he said, you will have done more than 98% of the people on Wall Street. And if you read the footnotes in the annual report you will have done more than 100% of the people on Wall Street. 

I realized right away that if I just literally read a company’s annual report and the notes — or better yet, two or three years of reports — that I would know much more than others. Professional investors used to sort of be dazzled. 

Everyone seemed to think I was smart. I later realized that I had to do more than just that. I learned that I had to read the annual reports of those I am investing in and their competitors’ annual reports, the trade journals, and everything that I could get my hands on. 

But I realized that most people don’t bother even doing the basic homework. And if I did even more, I’d be so far ahead that I’d probably be able to find successful investments.”

Discussions
3 people like this. Showing 2 of 2 comments

rookie8833

good advise ... how many of us do read Annual Report before buying stocks when given "tips" by someone?

2013-08-02 10:24

KC Loh

Aik, where is tapir's earlier comment here? Hahahaha

He read the part about not reading annual report and straight away deleted his post? Mayan charts rules no? HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

2013-08-02 11:44

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