Amazon.com Review
The Rules for Growing Rich, David Lereah's manual for "Making Money in the New Information Economy," is a sophisticated compilation of tools and suggestions for tackling today's high-tech world of finance. All investors, writes Lereah, chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Association, now "have almost instantaneous access to an abundance of investment data once available only to professional investors. Understanding how to sort, interpret and evaluate this information is critical in developing successful investment strategies." He subsequently offers authoritative advice on formulating such tactics and applying them in any economic scenario. Lereah begins with solid advice on monitoring the overall economy via cyberspace, pointing out the potential significance of interest rates, employment reports, and other business-cycle indicators (and noting, in each case, online sites that follow them). He then focuses on individual instruments used to act upon this information--stocks, bonds, real estate, options, futures, and international assets--along with investment principles to apply in good times and bad. These 201 resultant rules offer specific guidance for assorted situations, incorporating variables such as housing starts, durable goods orders, and the other regular reports discussed in the preceding section. There is a wealth of counsel here for diligent long-term investors who put in the time necessary to absorb it. --
Howard Rothman
From Publishers Weekly
The current booming economy has led many investors to mistakenly believe that making a million requires only plowing money into Internet-related stocks. In fact, argues Lereah, chief economist at the Mortgage Bankers Association, when the boom ends and the stock market falls precipitously, investors will need a firm grasp of economic trends, government policy, interest rates and other financial principles to maintain adequate returns on their investments. His book helps readers prepare for the future by offering "a structure for organizing and interpreting" the boundless financial information available online. Designed particularly for those who want to learn to use the Internet in managing their investments, this volume carefully explains the principles of stocks, bonds, real estate and other profit strategies. The accessible overview of economic trends and financial reporting is interspersed with occasionally obvious investment rules (e.g., Lereah advises investing in health-related stocks because baby boomers are aging and will be spending more on health care). Overall, this book is a good primer, best for readers with little experience in investing who need help sorting through all the professional data now available to amateurs online. Agent, Alice Martell. (July)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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