enotalone Home  |  Forum  |  Search    
The Big Money
by Frederick R. Kobrick
List Price: 27.00


Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Simon & Schuster (April 11 2006)
Costumer Rating: Costumer rating

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1: Anyone Can Become Rich
What if I told you that most investors today are practicing a form of 'Red Coat Investing' that undermines their ability to become truly wealthy? I would add that there is a way to win your own independence from inflexible, counterproductive investing.

Chapter 1: Anyone Can Become Rich, Part 2
Most of us can remember a few moments in life that were "defining." That is to say, something set us on a new or different course or made a big difference. This was one of those moments for me, and I have never forgotten it.



Book Description

In The Big Money veteran stock picker and mutual fund manager Fred Kobrick draws on his decades of success to explain his Seven Steps to financial security in any investing climate.

Kobrick shows investors how to find the high-quality stocks that will make them wealthy. A stock portfolio needs only a few stocks that appreciate in value ten or twenty times, or one or two stocks that appreciate in value a hundred times or more. Kobrick describes how he found some of his most successful stocks simply by looking carefully at the products and services that customers and investors love, and recognizing the great business models that create repeatability, the ability to keep producing success. This is a timeless approach, so what works with Microsoft, Dell, or Home Depot will work with Google and even newer companies. Kobrick explains that the average investor should not try to emulate a stock analyst or a technician to find great stocks that will generate great wealth. Instead investors must recognize great companies early — by understanding their business model, identifying their assumptions, recognizing their business strategy, and evaluating their management. Kobrick calls those four factors BASM, and they are the cornerstone of his investing philosophy. Great managements grow companies and earnings, driving stock prices higher. Kobrick also offers some tried-and-tested ways to know when you have a winner you should hold, and when you should sell.

Throughout the book Kobrick describes some of his biggest successes — as well as a few stocks he missed. His stories about these companies are insightful and frequently entertaining. In bull and bear markets, from retail to high tech, Kobrick has prospered. His stories and his Seven Steps to financial success will show investors what they need to know to do the same thing — prosper in any investing climate. No serious investor can afford to be without this book.

About the Author

Frederick R. KobrickFrederick R. Kobrick

Frederick R. Kobrick has managed money for more than thirty years. He spent fourteen years as an investment analyst at Wellington Management Company, then joined State Street Research & Management in 1985. He managed the State Street Research Capital Fund, which was one of the five best-performing funds in the country for fifteen years, according to USA Today.

  » More by Frederick R. Kobrick