Benjamin Graham
Foundational classic
The Intelligent Investor
Graham's central point is that the market exists to serve you, not to
instruct you. Price volatility matters only when it gives you a better
chance to buy wisely or sell rationally.
- Margin of safety is the permanent cornerstone.
- Mr. Market is a lesson about temperament, not just metaphor.
- Speculation becomes dangerous when it pretends to be investment.
Graham and Dodd
Analytical classic
Security Analysis
This is the original deep-work manual. It insists that a real
investment case starts with assets, obligations, earnings quality, and
downside protection before story or sentiment.
- Ask what protects you if optimism proves wrong.
- Balance-sheet reality matters as much as reported income.
- Skepticism is a tool, not a personality trait.
Philip Fisher
Quality investing
Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits
Fisher shifts attention toward quality, management skill, and the
long runway of exceptional businesses. He also makes field research
feel practical through the scuttlebutt method.
- Outstanding businesses can deserve long holding periods.
- Management quality is a real analytical variable.
- Growth only matters when the economics stay strong.
Seth Klarman
Risk first
Margin of Safety
Klarman focuses on asymmetry, patience, and the importance of
controlling downside before reaching for upside. The book is as much
about process and temperament as it is about bargains.
- Permanent loss matters more than short-term volatility.
- Cash can be a rational asset when prices are poor.
- Dislocations often come from forced or emotional selling.
Howard Marks
Market psychology
The Most Important Thing
Marks organizes investing around cycles, risk awareness, and
second-level thinking. The book is really about judgment under
uncertainty and about seeing what the crowd is missing.
- What matters is not just value, but what is already in the price.
- Cycle awareness prevents dangerous extrapolation.
- Risk control is inseparable from intelligent opportunism.
Charlie Munger
Mental models
Poor Charlie's Almanack
Munger's enduring lesson is that investors think better when they use
a latticework of models from multiple disciplines rather than forcing
every question through a single narrow lens.
- Incentives explain an enormous share of behavior.
- A multidisciplinary approach reduces blind spots.
- Patience and simplicity are competitive advantages.