- This topic has 100 replies, 22 voices, and was last updated Jun-173:47 pm by Sophie Macon.
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@AjFinance My favorite author for finance is Michael Lewis, he is pretty famous. I liked Liar’s Poker and Boomerang (even my 15 year old sister enjoyed Boomerang). I also like Quants and The Intelligent Investor and Security Analysis (books Warren Buffett is also fond of). If you are interested in behavioural economics/finance I recommend Dan Ariely’s books and if you have time Superfreakonomics and freakonomics. If you lack time freakonomics also has a movie and it follows the book closely.
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@AjFinance The second I see self-help book I am turned off. But since you are recommending it, l will look for a copy and give it a try. It sounds a lot like “Thinking, fast and slow” but that book uses a lot of technical terminology and hence is a slow read T.T
Right now I am reading This is your Brain on Music. Since I like music and I believe that to be a good portfolio manager I have to understand what makes people tick~ -
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Yes please @diya – can you email team AT 300hours DOT com? I’ll drop it into a spreadsheet and share around.
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We will get there someday @Dollarstodonuts. You a little quicker since you’re nearly done with the CFA. Good luck!
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After reading the blog post on work/edu background correlation with performance, I was wondering what everyone’s educational background is.
I’m non-finance (majored in engineering), but currently in a finance-based job.
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I graduated in 2008 with a Commerce Degree, more or less inclined towards accounting. @Diya portfolio management is indeed a dream destination 🙂 . I like reading as well, can you suggest any good financial literature that you’ve come across?
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@AjFinance I read all sorts of books if you ever need more recommendation just hollar~
Malcolm Galdwell is also an all time favourite but he isn’t a finance guy but his books are interesting.
@christine I like all his books in general but the Big Short was so tedious. -
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@Diya surely its enough 😛 I had read “Power of the subconcious mind” sometime back. Its a good read.
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@Diya Handbook of Fixed Income Securities – Frank Fabozzi, Distress Investing – Martin Whitman, Outliers – Malcolm Gladwell, Wealth of Nations – Adam Smith, Blink – Malcolm Gladwell, The Practicing Mind – Thomas Sterner, Eurodollar Futures and Options Handbook – Galen Burghardt. Need to add a few more before I lose track of them 😛
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@AjFinance / @Diya: Why not start a new discussion list on books? One of you can constantly keep them updated on good suggestions – I can see a few good ones there I’d like to add to my summer reads!
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Ah I get it @Dollarstodonuts, that’s RIA. I noticed you also did CAIA. What’s that about and is it helpful/useful in your current role, or for your target role in AM? Does it overlap the CFA?
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Ah, so it’s complementary then @Dollarstodonuts! As mentioned in this “What do you do” thread, I’m looking to explore the AM sector too. What role in particular are you looking at? Portfolio mgmt?
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I did architecture, so not very related, haha. Am in finance consulting now though, so work-related experience covered 🙂
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@SidMenon, I just graduated too and looking for a job. Did economics in university. We may be in the same boat
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@Diya me too. Although I have been into Self Help books off late 🙂 Speaking about financial books, I heard about a book called Currency Wars while attending a seminar.
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@AjFinance Wealth of Nations reminds me that I want to read Adam Smith’s Mistake by Kenneth Lux. Seems interesting but the book is out of print (yea it is that old)! I love Malcolm Gladwell’s book. Yea I should also write down all the titles I want to read!
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@Maroon5 Registered Investment Advisor. We manage the portfolios of institutions and high net-worth individuals. Basically, we construct an asset allocation based on the client’s risk tolerances then choose managers we like to fill the asset classes. Basically, an RIA is a “manager of managers.”
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I know! I was just going through this thread and thinking of somehow having a book review list, or something. If you’re ever interested in writing a book review @diya, @ajfinance let us know!
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@Maroon5 Good luck to you as well! With some hard work and determination I’m sure we’ll both reach our goals 🙂
@christine right now my personal investing has me focused on the beverages and vitamin/supplements industries which I’ve been enjoying quite a bit now. how about yourself?? -
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Oh cool! I’m really just looking for a move into equity research, with no real bias towards any industry. It’s just tough because most of the jobs I’ve applied for ask for valuation/modeling experience from I-banking or previous equity research roles, which I don’t have.
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Awesome @imdnextbuffet! what sector do you cover in research?
I’m sector agnostic covering bluechip & selective midcaps, but preferred sectors include Banks,Autos,FMCG & Pharma.
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Awesome @imdnextbuffet! what sector do you cover in research?
I’m sector agnostic covering bluechip & selective midcaps, but preferred sectors include Banks,Autos,FMCG & Pharma.
Good, you can be our 3H resident equities advisor then 🙂
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@christine sure, sounds like fun. Just let me finish my current Taiwanese drama marathon and I’ll have a look at which book I want to review. You’ll hear from me shortly =D
I’ll also go through this thread and compile a list of all the books mentioned =D -
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@Maroon5 the CAIA (chartered alternative investment analyst) is much like the CFA but it only focuses on alternative investment vehicles (PE, Venture Capital, Hedge Funds, Real Assets, etc.). It’s only two levels and it is fairly new. I embarked on it because I thought it a good way to prepare for the alternatives section for the CFA and at the same time earn another designation.
to be honest, it’s not the field I want to go in but given that the test is new and the pass rate is high, I thought I’d get in on “the ground floor” while it’s still a relatively easy test. the CFA is much more applicable to my career goals of moving into asset management.
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Oh no I’m not @DollarsToDonuts. I have a few good friends who are but never did it myself. 🙂
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Awesome @imdnextbuffet! what sector do you cover in research?
I’m sector agnostic covering bluechip & selective midcaps, but preferred sectors include Banks,Autos,FMCG & Pharma.
Good, you can be our 3H resident equities advisor then 🙂
I shall indeed, definitely do whatever I can with my knowledge in anyway possible.
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Hi @lulu123, I have a bachelors in economics, just graduated. We talked about this previously in this thread, check it out!
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I am commerce graduate with major in Accounts and did it in 2008, since then i have worked at different position in accounts field, right from Cashier and presently as Financial Analyst!
@AjFinance and @Diya: impressed by ur suggestion of books. Surely i’ll grab one soon!
@mcricky Glad you found it useful 🙂 Though I must admit that @Diya is the one driving the book suggestions. -
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Hi all – I’m a Canadian CA (Chartered Accountant), CPA and CIA (Certified Internal Auditor). Very excited to embark on this new path.
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Thanks guys!!
@Sophie – it’ll be my pleasure! I do have 7+ years of financial accounting background an am currently a financial audit manager.
@Sarah – I decided on the CFA after many months of research and evaluating my career goals. As I mentioned above, I’ve been on the financial reporting and auditing side for nearly 8 years, and am hoping to learn more about the finance / analysis side of things. My ultimate goal is a career in finance, maybe as an analyst. -
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Thanks @Sophie! The studying makes me feel I’m in a cloud of uncertainty. I’ve been drilling quizzes left and right and averaging mid 70s to high 80s in Ethics, Econ, and Quants. I’m currently reading FRA and haven’t done any quizzes on that yet, but that’s going to be coming up. Nervous that I’m not doing enough!
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I specialized in finance and majored in economics. I also did a couple of certificates for financial advising at a retail level but I decided that I don’t really like retail that much.
I am looking for a finance related job, and dream about portfolio management. I also like to read finance related books, I can recommend a few if you are interested @fabian =D -
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I just graduated in 2012 with a Bachelors of Commerce degree with specialization in finance. No work experience, though. I may be the youngest person around 😛
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@AjFinance I’ve heard of it. Actually recently I haven’t been reading finance/economics related books – CFA is enough for now lol. Recently I’ve been interested in the brain and how it works.
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@Diya I did go on a Freakonomics bender some time back, including a lovely book called More Sex is Safer Sex. that’s an eye-catching title!
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@Diya yea well it depends, quite a few friends of mine won’t touch self help or motivational literature 🙂 . I got hooked onto it after reading Robin Sharma’s books, have read most of his publications. I have a few financial books on my Amazon Wish list that I need to read. Guess I’ll get it on my kindle after the exams 😉
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@Ajfinance it is just something about self-help books that piss me off. I’m not even sure what it is but I generally don’t go anywhere near self-help books even if they become really popular.
Which books do you have on your wish list on Amazon? -
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Japanese and Economics major from UCI (Zot zot!) and have been an RIA analyst for about two years now since graduation. Hoping to move to equity analyst role within asset management.
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@ajfinance I haven’t read them – I’ve just bought them. Hence stern stares!
I’ve got The Pleasures & Sorrows of Work (Alain De Botton, that was a weird purchase since he’s never had a job in his life!), the whole QI series, The Honest Truth About Dishonesty, The End of Money. To name a few.
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@Christine those are catchy titles 😉 . About the book review, sure we can do it. I like writing, and I have a blog that I started a year back but haven’t written much.
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@Diya A compliled list is a great idea. Perhaps we can keep a special section on the home page that says Must reads or Finance Collection that would include aforementioned books and more. @MattJuniper thanks for the suggestion, will look up that book, hadn’t heard of it. Biography of Jamie Dimon sounds great. You can’t help but admire his style of leadership. One more for my wish list I guess, its a shame haven’t read it even though I was employed with the company previously 🙂
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OK @christine
So the tally so far is 22 books, I included the books @christine mentioned but hasn’t read. I dropped a few of my own suggestions since they aren’t strictly finance. If you want the list I can sent it to you. I still need to add the author for a few titles. -
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I’ve started a new category called Book Recommendations (which doesn’t show in the ‘Recent Discussions’ list so that it doesn’t get too spammy). I’ll upload the recommended books so far as discussions so that each thread is just about the one book.
I’ll credit each book recommendation to each member with an @mention, and will upload the books over the next few days.
If people find this helpful we’ll keep it as a permanent feature. If you want to recommend new books, just PM me 🙂
Big thanks to @Diya for collecting all the titles so far!
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Personally I’ve been looking at tech. Are you looking for a career in beverages and/or supplements?
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Japanese and Economics major from UCI (Zot zot!) and have been an RIA analyst for about two years now since graduation. Hoping to move to equity analyst role within asset management.
With majors in Japanese & Economics from UCI is amazing. But to get into Equity research role, I believe you would need either experience or the degree related to the same. As your experience is in RIA which I believe is “Regulatory Impact Analyst/Assessment” is quite different then what ERA’s do. So you need some financial degree to backup your skills which is why CFA would be recommended. 🙂
p.s. – I’m a research analyst & CFA lvl 2 June 2014, FRM part 1 Nov 2013.
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I am commerce graduate with major in Accounts and did it in 2008, since then i have worked at different position in accounts field, right from Cashier and presently as Financial Analyst!
@AjFinance and @Diya: impressed by ur suggestion of books. Surely i’ll grab one soon! -
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@Sophie – I haven’t sought a job in that area yet, mainly because I’m still having fun and progressing in my current position.
I’ve also committed to one more “busy season” with my current employer to allow for a proper transition of my files. After that, and hopefully with a couple of CFA levels under my belt, I’ll look for an analyst position.
What type of role do you currently have, if you don’t mind me asking?
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I have a Bachelor of Arts degree in Music Technology, an MBA (in … BA stuff), and now work at an investment firm that required me to get my 6, 63, 7, and 66. I haven’t done any music stuff in over a year. Now with studying for the CFA I’ve actually tried incorporating music back into my routine to destress during those long nights of drilling quizzes on Quants and Econ.
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@christine I would be up for that too! I’ve got a shed load of books that I’ve read, am reading or still have to read. Am reading A biography on Jamie Dimon at the moment. Recently read David Einhorn’s book ‘Fooling some of the people all of the time’, and would probably recommend this as the best book to read if your doing CFA exams as it covers so many of the topics but shows how they are used in practice as part of a true story.
You obviously have to include CityBoy in any finance book list…it’s probably the single biggest reason as to why graduates want to go and work in finance!
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@Sophie, @christine Internally we should probably organize it in an excel file and we could have a poll to see which books are currently popular with CFA candidates/members. We should probably have a cap on how many books are on the list? Or we can divide up the list by category, I’m pretty sure a lot of non-finance/economic books were mentioned.
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@imdnextbuffet saw from @christine that you’ve been an analyst for the past 2 years. was just wondering if you could share your story about how you entered that role.
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@AjFinance There is no friend as loyal as a book
-Ernest HemingwayDamn I sound like a total nerd
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