Motley Fool Money - 6 Great Books for Investors
Episode Date: April 5, 2022April is Financial Literacy Month and we've got some recommendations to make you a smarter investor! (00:20) Anand Chokkavelu mentions a couple of popular titles investors may want to skip, before he ...recommends the following books: Liar's Poker - Michael Lewis The Big Short - Michael Lewis (Shameless Plug Alert!) The Motley Fool Investment Guide - David and Tom Gardner The Little Book That Beats The Market - Joel Greenblatt One Up On Wall Street - Peter Lynch Beating The Streat - Peter Lynch (10:00) Alison Southwick and Robert Brokamp talk with best-selling author Ron Lieber about how to help your kids be smarter about money (without looking like a jerk). Host: Chris Hill Guests: Anand Chokkavelu, Alison Southwick, Robert Brokamp, Ron Lieber Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineer: Rick Engdahl, Tim Sparks Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi everyone, I'm Charlie Cox.
Join us on Disney Plus as we talk with the cast and crew of Marvel Television's Daredevil Born Again.
What haven't you gotten to do as Daredevil?
Being the Avengers.
Charlie and Vincent came to play.
I get emotional when I think about it.
One of the great finale of any episode we've ever done.
We are going to play Truth or Daredevil.
What?
Oh boy.
Fantastic.
You guys go hard, man.
Daredevil Born Again, official podcast Tuesdays,
and stream season two of Marvel Television's Daredevil Born Again on Disney Plus.
It's Financial Literacy Month, and we've got some recommendations for your reading list.
Motleyful Money starts now.
I'm Chris Hill, joined by Anand Chaka Valu, longtime Motley Fool editor-analysts and currently
the livestream Programming Director.
Thanks for being here.
Thanks for having me, Chris, excited.
I mentioned this the other day to David Gardner.
April is Financial Literacy Month, and you're one of the more voracious readers I know
at the company and wanted to talk with you.
provide for the dozens of listeners, some book recommendations. And I'll just say up front,
the books we talk about, they're going to be listed in the show notes for this episode.
So we'll go through these books pretty quickly, but the full list will be in the show notes.
You and I were talking earlier, and you brought something up, which I thought was a great point,
and I'd like to start here, which is, hey, it might be helpful to start by a suggestion of what not to read,
Because there are a lot of great books that you can read to become a better investor.
But that doesn't mean you should necessarily start with any book.
If you do a Google search and you look for lists of the best investment books, frequently
the Benjamin Graham books are like one and two, the intelligent investor and security analysis.
And to be clear, I mean, he was Warren Buffett's mentor.
It's a truly great set of books.
But one, it's outdated.
He used to update these every five years or, you know, but one, it's outdated.
years or 10 years. It's been like 50 years since intelligent investor was updated by him. And, you know,
so things change. And it's a very value-investingy, you know, deep net net type of stuff. And the other
thing is just it's so dense. If you're a first-time investor and you're just trying to learn just
some basics, you'll get intimidated, most likely, and you'll just stop on page three. And, you know,
you might lose two years.
So, no disrespect to Benjamin Graham, but yeah, probably not the place to start.
Part of our conversation earlier was about how there are books out there that aren't really
how to get started investing books, but they can still be enjoyable reads.
Brad Stone, who we had on the show last year for his book, Amazon Unbound.
Brad Stone's a great writer.
That's a great book.
made a lot of best business books of 2021 list. It's not really going to help you be a better
investor. It will make you a more informed Amazon shareholder if you happen to be an Amazon shareholder.
But sort of in that same category, you said, you know, there are books that are sort of fun
looks at Wall Street, too. Yeah. So, you know, the Michael Lewis books, which are actually kind
of useful like Moneyball and things like that. But the first one I read was Lyres Poker, which was his first
book about his time at Solomon Brothers, which, you know, I know, Chris, you were going to talk about
the big short. And this is kind of the prequel because a lot of the mortgage stuff, the securitization
and chopping up of mortgages was happening there with like Louis Reneery and the other folks there.
And Michael Lewis had a front row seat there. So he recently got the audio book rights back,
if I remember right, because I just went through the audio book after I read it like 20 years
ago, and Michael Lewis actually narrates it. And then he's got a companion podcast on his
Against the Rules podcast. He's got a little module called Other People's Money, where he brings
on folks like the human piranha from back in the day and reveals who they are and talks to them
all these years later. So that combination is a really good, interesting look at Wall Street and
incentives. A lot of these things happen because of incentives. And that's kind of a through line
of a lot of Michael Lewis's books.
For my money, probably the best nonfiction writer in America.
The big short is not just great writing and brilliant storytelling of the very small number
of people who saw the 2008 financial crisis coming and invested accordingly.
But I do think that book also offers for any investor a...
clear-eyed look at how pervasive group think is on Wall Street, that even though there
are smart people saying, now, I really think the sky is falling, there are so many people
who are just like, no, everything's fine. Everything's fine with the housing markets. No, it's
totally fine. And it's, you know, I think for investors, one of the lessons there is, yeah,
sometimes you have to get comfortable with the idea that.
that you're really going to be swimming against the tide because there will be a lot of people
swimming against you. In terms of investment books, a little bit of a shameless plug here,
but I think there's a reason the Motley Full Investment Guide holds up over time.
Yeah. I mean, it was written about 20 years ago and now the third edition was 2017. That's
the one you want because it's updated. We were debating whether to put this on, you know, because
it is a shameless plug. But it really is.
the answer that I give people. Some of our older books, it just doesn't resonate as well right
now or where they might be on specific topics. This investment guide gives a really good,
broad view, not just of foolish investing, but just the different kinds and the different things
you can do. And it really is what we use to teach new fools. We've had book clubs and things
like that to help teach people the Motley Fool investing strategies.
You and I have been at the company long enough. I think,
I think we are both, among other things, disappointed when we encounter people in life who,
when we talk about where we work and we talk about stock market investing, it's kind of
disappointing when you meet someone who's like, it's just, it's a big casino, buying
a stock. It's like buying a lottery ticket. And there are books out there that really do try
and teach around the idea that, no, you're actually becoming part owner of a big.
business. And you had a book that I think does a very good job of that.
Yeah. So, like, the best book for, you know, the old quote, buy businesses, not lottery tickets,
is Joel Greenblatt's the little book that beats the market. It really is a little book. It's
super tiny, super quick read. You can read it in like, I think, two hours. It's been a while.
But it just lays down kind of the simple ways of exactly how you can evaluate a business using just a
couple metrics. It's pretty incredible what Joel Greenblatt did with that book and sort of the way
it caught fire. Because you have to believe, at least for a lot of people, I mean, we started
by talking about Benjamin Graham. If you're just starting out and maybe you're intimidated,
about investing on your own for the first time, then there is something very attractive about
just literally a small book. Yeah. And you know what you don't want to read is Joel Greenblatt's much
Well, it'll give you the title, you can be a stock market genius, which definitely sounds more
appealing, but it's a lot about special situations investing. It's definitely a worthwhile read,
but definitely after you've had a few years in the game.
So, along those lines, when you've been investing a little bit on your own, you've got a bit
more experience, I was pleasantly surprised that when we were chatting back and forth earlier
today. You mentioned Peter Lynch. Yeah, and a lot of people use Peter Lynch as, hey, that's the
first book you should read. And I remember reading him years ago. And frankly, a lot of the things,
you know, upon rereading, you're like, oh, I didn't catch that nuance. And I didn't, you know,
Peter Lynch, the fundamental thing you learn from him is, hey, look, anyone can do this.
And a lot of times it's just, you know, hey, I went to this store at the mall and it's really doing
amazing business. Maybe I should start researching that business, not just buy it.
but just as a thing to research, right?
But so his two books that are really good for this are one up on Wall Street and beating the
street.
I'd recommend after you've been in the game for a few years, start reading those.
For example, he's got just great ways to how to evaluate a bank stock.
For a first-time investor, that's a little rough, but after you've done it for a while,
it's just great tips.
Thank you for making the distinction because there are times when I hear people reference
Peter Lynch and they don't make the distinction that you just made, which is a very important
one, which is they sort of brush off Peter Lynch as, oh, I went to the mall and I went
by this store and there were a lot of people shopping at it.
So I bought the stock.
It's like, no, that's not at all what Peter Lynch was trying to teach people.
He's trying to teach you that that can be a point for generating an idea, but then you've got
to go do the research. You can't just be like, oh, well, I shop there, so therefore everyone
shops there, right? Yep. So easy.
On a Chuck of Ballou. Thank you so much for being here.
Thank you, Chris.
In keeping with the financial literacy theme, we're going to check in with best-selling
author Ron Lieber. He writes the Your Money column for the New York Times, and he's written
several books about personal finance. Allison Southwick and Robert Brokamp recently caught up with
him to talk about some of the toughest financial questions that kids
ask. Fortunately, Ron's given a lot of thought to helping kids be smarter with money.
So before we get into the tough questions to answer, I want to read a quote from your book,
the opposite of spoiled raising kids who are grounded, generous, and smart about money.
And so you're talking to the reader explaining the big takeaway for teaching your kids about
money. This isn't a huge spoiler. Don't worry. You write, every conversation about money is
also about values. Allowance is about patience. Giving is about generosity. Work is about
perseverance. You go on from there. As a parent, when you get tough questions from your kids about
money, you might want to bumble through them as quickly as possible because talking about money
can be complicated. But your point is that money conversations give you an opportunity to actually
instill or reinforce bigger values for how to live a good life. Can I just get you to react to that?
Like, how did you come up with this? Well, this was the thing. You know, for some authors,
an ideal
you perfectly formed
like a bolt
from the blue
the money books
that I've written
haven't been like that
at all
because there's a lot
of money books out there
and there's a lot
of basic personal finance
as we all know
but if I've been good
at anything the last decade
it's been trying
to kind of tap
into the emotional
wellspring
and the complicated
feelings around money
so for this one
you know
the
you know the
you know, kids and money and allowance and spending and saving, you know, it felt kind of dutiful,
but I know every parent wants their kids to have good values. And what I eventually realized,
after thinking about it for years after I first thought that there was, you know, space for
another approach on kids and money, what I finally realized is that like the basics of saving and
spending and giving, those are really just proxies for, well, you know, saving is about patience and
perseverance. Spending is about modesty and prudence and thrift, right? Giving money away charity.
That's about generosity and gratitude that you have more than enough, right? And hanging over
at all is curiosity, not just about money, but about how the world works, right? And a perspective on your
place in the world and how you arrive there. And it turns out that all of these things are things
that kids are wrestling with the moment that they first asked about.
about money. And it was making those connections that really put some kind of fire behind my
tail. Yeah. So through the lens of instilling values when you're having money conversations with your
kids, you're here to help us answer a few common and tough questions that every parent is going
to be asked at some point by their child. So let's start with one of the first questions about money
from your kiddo that initially sort of stumped you. And it was your, I believe your kid was three years
old at the time, and you just visited some friends who had rented a house for a vacation,
and I'll let you finish the story.
Yeah, so we're in the car one day, and like literally apropos of nothing, right?
You know how these like non sequiturs come up if you have kids or nieces or nephews or you're a teacher?
And just like out of nowhere, she asked daddy, and of course, she's addressing me, even though
her mother's in the car, somehow she sensed that, you know, I'm the person who plays
Dr. Money in the newspaper on the weekend. She says, Daddy, why don't we have a summer house?
And I was just like sort of stopped cold because, you know, we couldn't afford a summer
house. And the point at which it began to be something we might even think about, you know,
was clear that we were going to make different choices with our money for a long time to come.
And so we haven't been talking about this. How did she even know that such a thing existed?
Right. But the other thing about it was that.
that it sort of cut to the core of not just her own curiosity about the world, but specifically
about her parents as sort of like economic players in a larger marketplace, right? Who are these
people that I have been born to? How do they make decisions? What's important to them? What tradeoffs
are they making? And, you know, why are there some people that have this thing that I would like to have
that seems kind of fun, right?
And these people who are in charge of me have made this choice, and maybe I don't agree with it,
right?
I think all of that was swirling around her 42-month-old brain, and that question was her way
of articulating it.
And the fact that I couldn't answer her was not only personally embarrassing to me in front
of my spouse who thought the whole thing was hysterical, right?
But I felt like I was failing her and ultimately kind of failing the world to the extent that
I hold myself out as any kind of money expert.
not to have a script to react to that.
So I had to build one.
All right.
So then how do you answer that question?
How did you answer that question when you had a chance to think about it?
I was stunned into silence.
I'm not sure what I said, but it was right after that that I started thinking about the fact that I needed to build these scripts for myself and my parents and for other parents.
And the first thing that I came up with, you know, which I now.
suggest to everybody is just to answer any such question with another question, right? Which is,
why do you ask? You know, it's not meant to be an accusation as if there's something wrong
with expressing your childlike or actually childish or child curiosity in that way, to make them
feel like their inquiry is in fact welcome. Because not only may the question really ultimately
be about something else entirely, and this is just their way of articulating it, but by responding
to a question with the question, it's a stalling mechanism that kind of gives you time to get your
act together to respond in a way that's age-appropriate and also values-driven.
All right. So now that you know what to say, how would you answer that question? Why don't we
have a vacation home? I guess I would say this, right? Well, there are lots of different kinds of
of homes, some costs more than others, and some people have more than one, if they're really
lucky, or if that's a choice that they've made. And someday we may be able to or may want to make a
choice like that, but right now we've chosen to spend the extra money that we have on other
things. And then just see if they follow up, right? One of the tricks here is not trying to
answer other questions that they're not asking, you know, in our sort of nervousness about the fact
that we've been called out or asked a thing that we're not quite sure we know how to handle
or know the answer to. Right. So keep it short and simple. And if they have other questions,
they'll ask them. But often short and simple is enough to satisfy them. All right. Here's our next
question. I believe this is one that I have bungled. My daughter asked me, mom, how much do you make?
She was like, let's say six years old at the time.
And I just flat out told her, I don't know.
I think that was maybe wrong.
I don't think it's wrong to tell them the answer, you know, at a teenage age.
And, you know, the risk that you take, you know, when you're talking to a kid with like a single digit age is they might go and repeat that information.
And maybe they'll bungle it and get it wrong.
Now, you know, the concern there is that, you know, other kids or other parents might feel like you're bragging if you earn a lot of money or that you're just like weird.
You know, kids will share that information at inopportune moments in inappropriate ways because they're kids, right?
So that's the risk.
To my mind, the right answer to the question is this.
That is a great question.
Why do you ask, right?
and then give them an opportunity to say where the inquiry came from.
Because it could be because they're scared, right?
Maybe they overheard a conversation on the phone or a conversation with your spouse,
if you have one or your ex, if you have one of those, right?
And they just sort of like misconstrued it, right?
Or maybe they overheard something crazy on the playground and now their brains are all scrambled, right?
So give them a chance to explain themselves.
But I think the right answer is, I'm so glad you asked that question.
I or we, if it's two of you, intend to tell you the answer when you're 16 or 17, 18.
But first, there's a whole bunch of stuff you have to learn.
So let's start now, right, if this is the beginning of the process, right?
It begins with allowance and saving and spending and giving and tradeoffs.
And then you want to introduce them to all sorts of manners of, you know, household budget tree, right?
You know, the grocery bill.
And you can put them in charge of the electric bill for a year and then teach them about insurance, right?
And if that doesn't bore them to death, then there's a whole high school long conversation you can have about discretion, right, about not telling your sibling secrets or your friend's secrets on social media, on not repeating things that your parents say in an appropriate way.
And then and only then you have the conversation with them where you say, okay, we're ready.
But you should know that if you repeat this out in the world, there's a pretty good chance that people are going to think you're an asshole.
right and no teenager wants to flunk the asshole
so at that point they're ready but only that
when they're old enough for you to say the word
a s'l in front of them that's when that's when you know you can tell
right can even say that are we bleeping that is that what we're doing
you know insert more appropriate word there if you wish yeah
one of the keys from your book ron is that money shouldn't be a taboo subject
subject. So any questions that they have, answer them and have good open discussions about it.
I am curious, you know, this question about how much do you make? We're a couple of years
from a recession where some people lost their jobs. And how much do you talk about that with
your kids? Because on the one hand, they should be aware of the financial situation. On the other
hand, you don't want to burden them with anxiety that they may not be old enough to really
handle and understand. Yeah, it's a tough one. I think, first of all, we need
to honor and respect the fact that they almost always know more than we think they do.
And if you've lost a lot of income or lost all of your income, there's a pretty good chance
that you're talking about it more than you think. And even if you aren't, you know, your kids may be
reading over your shoulder or picking up your phone or there may be documents laying around,
they kind of give them a sense of it. You know, obviously if you're sort of food insecure or
housing insecure, they know that or they're sensing, you know, if you have to move someplace cheaper
or change what you eat, that, you know, something could be changing, right? So the fact is,
is that they are aware, and I think not addressing it head on, can have the effect of creating
more anxiety, not less, which is not what we want to do as parents. So, you know, to the extent that
you think that they are aware, or if they are older and, you know, ready to have this conversation,
You can say different versions, age-appropriate versions of the following.
Hey, I know that you're aware of what's going on here.
I am almost, or we are almost positive, that things are going to end up okay.
And you don't need to worry about the basics.
And here's why, right?
We may have less money than we used to.
We may have less money right now.
But we continue to be rich in health.
in friendships, in family, in community support, in, you know, terrific teachers and administrators
at your schools, you know, who can help if we need it. I, we are not worried and we don't want
you to be worried either. And we want you to know that it's okay to talk about it, to ask questions,
to be sad or to be mad at us, that all of that is okay. And that you shouldn't keep it to yourself.
It is crazy how much kids will absorb and, you know, their brains just keep working on it.
And I'm reminded of a story my mom tells. And so she is a woman who is now on in years.
Since I am on in years, it follows that she is as well. And she still tells this story several times.
And it's still, you can tell that she's still emotionally very like turned around over it.
When she was a little girl, her mom says they're at the.
store and her mom just happened to mention, well, this is my last $20. Her mom meant,
this is my last $20 in my wallet. I'm going to need to go to the bank. Don't worry about
but all she said was this is my last $20. And my mom as a little girl thought, this is our last
$20 in the world. I'm not sure if it's because of this exact moment, but to this day,
my mom remains an extremely frugal person. But if her mom would have had like this longer
You know, this is not my last $20 in the world, darling. We have more in the bank, but this is my last $20 in my purse.
You know, how different would that of, like, stressed out this poor little girl. It's so funny how kids,
how kids little brains work and how it sticks with them. Those conversations at that young of an
age, decades, many decades later, my mom is still remembering the fear that she felt. Yeah, it's
totally true, right? And I think the thing that we have to remember because, particularly if we're
older parents, we're in the process of like forgetting stuff, even more than we're learning
stuff, right? Is that they're just little sponges and it is their job to puzzle out how the world
works. And money is a not small part of how the world works, whether we like it or not. And so of course
they're going to have hundreds of questions and some of their confusion may go in
articulated for years, right? So we just have to be watching for that. And it's not like
something we should be obsessed with, but you should think about it a couple times a week,
right, as the appropriate moments come up to kind of interject a 15 second lesson or
explanation or whatever. All right, Ron. Well, we have run out of time for this week.
This has all been great, but we actually have way more questions that we want your help answer
So, could you come back next week?
I can come back next week.
All right, wonderful.
We'll see you back next week with maybe even harder questions to answer.
That's all for today, but coming up tomorrow, we've got a bull versus bear debate on a retail
business that has defied expectations.
As always, people in the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about, and the
Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against, so don't buy ourselves stocks based solely on what you hear.
I'm Chris Hill.
listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
