Everyone wants to be a contrarian investor. From the hedge funds who bet against the US housing market in the run up to 2008, to George Soross billion-dollar bet against the Bank of England in 1992, some of the most famous and most profitable trades in history have been contrarian calls. And with the relentless growth of passive investing - investors blindly following the market - the opportunities for a smart investor to profit by betting against the crowd should be greater than ever. Yet being a contrarian is hard work. It takes patience, the conviction to stand by an unpopular viewpoint, and the mental toughness to endure being 'wrong' for prolonged periods of time. Standing out from the crowd goes against our every natural instinct. Which is, of course, why it works. So how do you go about it? There is no single, mechanical investment approach that marks an investor out as a contrarian. Instead, you need to adopt a sceptical mindset: a flexible mode of thinking that allows you to stand back and spot when the markets view of the world is badly out of touch with reality - and the best way to profit when reality eventually reasserts itself. In The Sceptical Investor, John Stepek, executive editor of MoneyWeek, pulls together the latest research on behavioural finance, and examples from well-known contrarian investors, to offer practical techniques to help you to spot opportunities in common investment situations, from turnaround plays to bubbles and busts, that others in the market miss. It won't make you popular and it won't make you famous. But it will make you money.
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Product Details
Weight: 314g
Dimensions: 138 x 215mm
Publication Date: 11 Mar 2019
Publisher: Harriman House Publishing
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780857196279
About John Stepek
John Stepek has been writing about business economics and investment for more than 20 years. He is the executive editor of MoneyWeek Britain's bestselling weekly investment magazine. Since 2005 he has been the main author on its investment newsletter Money Morning which goes out by email to more than 85000 readers each day. MoneyWeek is well-known for its contrarian investment views most notably for warning repeatedly well before the fall of Northern Rock or Lehman Brothers that the collapse in US house prices in 2006 would mutate into a much more damaging financial crisis. Before he became a journalist Stepek worked for his family's business a chain of electrical retail shops in the east end of Glasgow but then decided that he would rather write for a living. He started out by writing articles about the specific business challenges facing family firms and now writes about all aspects of financial markets from bonds to gold to derivatives. He studied psychology at university and has always been fascinated by the gap between the way the market works in theory and the way it works in practice and by how our deep-rooted instincts work against our best interests as investors. His work has been published in The Spectator and The Sunday Times as well as a wide range of specialist financial magazines. He has appeared as an expert commentator on BBC Radio 4's Today programme BBC Radio Scotland Newsnight Daily Politics and Bloomberg.