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The Little Book That Makes You Rich: A Proven Market-Beating Formula for Growth Investing (Little Books. Big Profits)

The Little Book That Makes You Rich: A Proven Market-Beating Formula for Growth Investing (Little Books. Big Profits)

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Author: Louis Navellier
Creator: Steve Forbes
Publisher: Wiley
Category: Book

List Price: $19.95
Buy New: $6.17
You Save: $13.78 (69%)



New (58) Used (23) from $5.47

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 52 reviews
Sales Rank: 20097

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 208
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.1 x 0.9

ISBN: 047013772X
Dewey Decimal Number: 332.6322
EAN: 9780470137727
ASIN: 047013772X

Publication Date: October 5, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Audio Download - The Little Book That Makes You Rich (Unabridged)

Accessories:

  • The Little Book of Value Investing (Little Books. Big Profits)
  • The Little Book That Beats the Market (Little Books. Big Profits)
  • The Little Book of Common Sense Investing: The Only Way to Guarantee Your Fair Share of Stock Market Returns (Little Books. Big Profits)

Similar Items:

  • The Little Book of Common Sense Investing: The Only Way to Guarantee Your Fair Share of Stock Market Returns (Little Books. Big Profits)
  • The Little Book That Builds Wealth: The Knockout Formula for Finding Great Investments (Little Books. Big Profits)
  • The Little Book of Value Investing (Little Books. Big Profits)
  • The Little Book That Beats the Market (Little Books. Big Profits)
  • The Only Three Questions That Count: Investing by Knowing What Others Don't (Fisher Investments Press)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Profit from a powerful, proven investment strategy

The Little Book That Makes You Rich is the latest book in the popular "Little Book, Big Profits" series. Written by Louis Navellier -- one of the most well-respected and successful growth investors of our day -- this book offers a fundamental understanding of how to get rich using the best in growth investing strategies. Navellier has made a living by picking top, actively traded stocks and capturing unparalleled profits from them in the process. Now, with The Little Book That Makes You Rich, he shows you how to find stocks that are poised for rapid price increases, regardless of overall stock market direction. Navellier also offers the statistical and quantitative measures needed to measure risk and reward along the path to profitable growth stock investing. Filled with in-depth insights and practical advice, The Little Book That Makes You Rich gives individual investors specific tools for selecting stocks based on the factors that years of research have proven to lead to growth stock profits. These factors include analysts' moves, profit margins expansion, and rapid sales growth. In addition to offering you tips for not paying too much for growth, the author also addresses essential issues that every growth investor must be aware of, including which signs will tell you when it's time to get rid of a stock and how to monitor a portfolio in order to maintain its overall quality. Accessible and engaging, The Little Book That Makes You Rich outlines an effective approach to building true wealth in today's markets.

Louis Navellier (Reno, NV) has one of the most exceptional long-term track records of any financial newsletter editor in America. As a financial analyst and editor of investment newsletters since 1980, Navellier's recommendations (published in Emerging Growth) have gained over 4,806 percent in the last 22 years, as confirmed by a leading independent newsletter rating service, The Hulbert Financial Digest. Emerging Growth is one of Navellier's four services, which also includes his Blue Chip Growth service for large-cap stock investors, his Quantum Growth service for active traders seeking shorter-term gains, and his Global Growth service for active traders focused on high growth global stocks.



Customer Reviews:   Read 47 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars If it works, that's great, but what if it doesn't?   December 26, 2008
This book makes some convincing arguments based on sound principles, hence the three stars. It stresses the importance of free cash flow, it states that fundamental variables have a life span after which the stop working, and it acknowledges that analysts' forecasts may well be wrong (resulting in earnings surprises). See also Stock Fundamentals On Trial: Do Dividend Yield, P/E and PEG Really Work? for evidence that stock analysts are fallible and that company fundamentals 'sometimes' work (and sometimes don't).

I do, however, have a problem with books that provide "proven" formulas for stock market success. The fact that a formula has worked in the past is encouraging, but cannot be used as a sure predictor of the future. Many "proven" formulas have failed in the past 12-18 months. Regardless of the investment or trading strategy you pick, it is important to have a Plan B, a safety net, or a way to get out in the face of The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable.

If this system works for you, that's great. But what if it doesn't? How will you know, when will you know, and what will you be able to do about it? Making money is one thing, but it may be just as important that you DON'T LOSE MONEY!: (in the Stock Markets).



1 out of 5 stars lots of hype   December 12, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I very much agree with the bad reviews here. Read the book and subscribed to two of his letters, Blue Chip and Emerging Growth in late 2007. Did nothing but lose money, and this is before the big Oct/Nov drops in the markets. And to make it worse, he blows much smoke and hype about how well things are going. Check out investorcrap.blogspot.com for some real feedback. Hope it helps someone not to lose money from his book or letters.


1 out of 5 stars I am the suffer of this book   November 2, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I bought this book last year and subscribed one of his services bluechip growth. Up to now, the whole portofolio is down more than 50%. What is relative unbearable is:

(1) When his stocks hit hard, he did not take risk control. Instead, he insisted that he focus on fundenmental and wall street is wrong. So he should go back to school to learn the first rule of investment.
(2) When he finally decided to sell of some of really bad stocks, he kept saying he did good job and looked for better ones.
(3) Even with the fact that the whole portofolio has down more than 50%, he manupilate the performance of his certain stocks in certain period to boost his service.

I believe I am not the only one who suffered his lier and marketing crap. The following blog has the collection:

[...]



4 out of 5 stars The Little Book that Makes Navallier Rich?   September 29, 2008
Overall, this is a good book. I think the whole "Little Books, Big Profits" series is great and I hope they continue releasing more books.

Navallier isn't the greatest writer, but he's not all that bad either. He's a self-confessed number crunching geek and it shows through his analytical style of writing where he wastes no words.

However, I question his true motive in writing this book. Was it truly to divulge his successful technique or was it the perfect book to guide you to subscribe to one of his newsletters? He offers a free (currently) website that evaluates stocks based on the criteria he lays out in his book, but sign up for it and hope you have a good spam filter.

The true value of this book is actually part of the other "Little Book, Big Profits" series. First, read the whole series and you'll have a good understanding of how the market works and how to invest. But the true value is in combining this book with Joel Greenblat's book and Pat Dorsey's book. Greenblat has a stock screening program as well that is also currently free. Start with Greenblat's screened stocks, evaluate their economic moat, as described by Dorsey, then check the grade Navallier's program gives the stock. Between all three steps, you're sure to find winners.

Good book, great series. Combine the knowledge of all these professionals and you'll learn a lot.



1 out of 5 stars Hype. Self promotion and marketing machine at work.   September 5, 2008
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Before employing this strategy, i suggest you review the performance of Navelliers mutual funds on Morningstar.com and/or other websites. Despite tremendous performance figures presented in the book, most of his funds rank poorly over the last 5 years on an annual basis. They are typically in the bottom quartile. Yes, his long-term numbers are still good and occasionally he has a decent year, but the reality is that the performance outlined in the book isn't what he's delivered over the last 5 years.

I'm always very leary of performance claims without the supporting data. For a "numbers guy" I was suprised only the basic return numbers were included. No supporting information is provided the shows the annual returns, risk or tracking error. Nor is the benchmark discussed. Further digging showed why. There is s huge disconnect between the real performance of the funds he runs and what's presented in the book. Be care employing this magic formula as, for the most part, even Louis doesn't produce the numbers he claims.


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