The Value Investing Bible
It's the book that everything else is based off, if not the strategies he outlines then the underlying arguments for why picking value stocks for investment is a good idea.
No-Nonsense Charlie Munger
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His example is one many investors have tried to replicate, though none are as upfront about it as Mohnish Pabrai-he readily admits that he copied Munger and Buffett.
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Warren Buffetts business partner is basically the terse bad cop to the routine. This biography tells us a lot about how he invests and the way he thinks about the world.
His example is one many investors have tried to replicate, though none are as upfront about it as Mohnish Pabrai-he readily admits that he copied Munger and Buffett.
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You can't really read any of these value investing books without having at least a flick through The Intelligent Investor (in my opinion).
It's the book that everything else is based off, if not the strategies he outlines then the underlying arguments for why picking value stocks for investment is a good idea.
The Dhandho Investor kinda condenses the knowledge from all the other value investing works in a way that is simple and practical, with real examples that he has come across when managing money.
Altogether a fun read, certainly more entertaining than The Intelligent Investor.