'My Advice? Go back to Graham and do your best to take it from there' - "Business Week". A classic - Those words can be applied without equivocation to the Security Analysis of 1934. This book secured Benjamin Graham's stature as a Wall Street immortal. The carefully honed methods for finding undervalued stocks and bonds he described here have never been equalled. These methods have already outlived their author by more than 20 years. But what of the original "Security Analysis"?In some ways, it too was immortal. Through five editions and nearly a million copies, it has been continuously in print for more than 60 years. With many additions and changes, the modern edition remains the investors' bible. But this original 1934 First Edition has its own unique charm and style - the special purity, elegance, and character of Graham as a man of letters - that distinguishes it across six decades and shows why this book launched an investing revolution. This authetic copy of the 1934 First Edition of "Security Analysis" gives you word for eloquent word the investing methods put forth by Benjamin Graham and his coauthor and follower, David Dodd, just five years after the infamous Stock Market Crash of '29. Its message today is just as vivid, just as lucid, and just as vital as it was in 1934. It's an investment in timeless wisdom and timeless value.
Survey and Approach.
Fixed Value Investments.
Senior Securities with Speculative Features.
Theory of Common Stock Investment: The Theory Factor.
Analysis of the Income Account.
The Earning Factor in Common Stock Valuation.
Balanced-Sheet Analysis.
Implications of Asset Value.
Additional Aspects of Security Analysis, Discrepancies Between Price and Value.
About Benjamin Graham and David Dodd
Benjamin Graham was a seminal figure on Wall Street. He is considered the father of modern security analysis. As the founder of the value school of investing, Graham influenced such subsequent investment legends as Warren Buffett, Mario Gabelli, John Neff, Michael Price, and John Bogle. Benjamin Graham grew up in New York City and graduated from Columbia University. David Dodd was a follower of Graham's theories and a fellow teacher at Columbia University, where he held the post of assistant professor of finance.