

desertcart.com: How I Invest My Money: Finance experts reveal how they save, spend, and invest: 9780857198082: Portnoy, Brian, Brown, Joshua: Books Review: Another Awesome Read by Josh Brown! - If it's written by Josh Brown, just know that it is full of down to earth financial wisdom, free of agenda and deep in context. This is for the financial pro, retail nerd, or anyone who want to understand what's truly important when it comes to investing. Review: Easy and great read - This was an easy and great read, and I liked that many of the advisors paid off their house, even though they knew that money could earn more in the market. It gives stability at home.

| Best Sellers Rank | #310,024 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #114 in Investment Portfolio Management #310 in Stock Market Investing (Books) #700 in Budgeting & Money Management (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (1,063) |
| Dimensions | 5.55 x 0.6 x 8.45 inches |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN-10 | 0857198084 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0857198082 |
| Item Weight | 8.2 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 208 pages |
| Publication date | November 17, 2020 |
| Publisher | Harriman House |
E**H
Another Awesome Read by Josh Brown!
If it's written by Josh Brown, just know that it is full of down to earth financial wisdom, free of agenda and deep in context. This is for the financial pro, retail nerd, or anyone who want to understand what's truly important when it comes to investing.
G**T
Easy and great read
This was an easy and great read, and I liked that many of the advisors paid off their house, even though they knew that money could earn more in the market. It gives stability at home.
H**E
Very Insightful! An interesting view into Financial Professional Lives!
I was interested in this book when Josh Brown mentioned it on CNBC a few weeks ago. I did not realize at the time it was his third book, coauthored with Brian Portnoy. Neither did I realize his personal revelations were six pages in the 197 page work which has no references nor index. Basically, it is a composite of 25 short essays by Gen Xer financial professionals, many viewed on financial cable networks, booked-ended by the authors. In these vignettes the individuals reveal their own personal financial situations for investing. I found this an interesting, unique, and different approach for a book on finance which is very simple to comprehend, if one is involved in investing. However, there are some limitations where some abbreviations are not per-labeled which may not provide understanding for all. Many of the same words and phrases appear in the twenty-five accounts. Words and phrases like: planned saving, passive funds, reduce spending, diversification of assets, invest in my company, investing in things you know, pay yourself first, Vanguard, HSA, 529 accounts, tax free growth etc. are frequently mentioned in the text. It appears Leighann missed the assignment, however Jenny Harrington, who I enjoy appearing on CNBC made up for the defect by her support for dividend investing. Especially the story of Betty, a ninety-two year old client, who shown her the light for equity dividend investing. Now I know what I liked about Jenny in her noontime investment platitudes. Granted I was disappointed the entire book did not house Josh Brown’s investment prowess as the large letters on the front cover revealed. Buyer beware, you always “should read the small print.” What I really enjoyed was seeing average Americans use the capitalist system to build and prosper their wealth. You do not need a doctorate, like Carolyn McClanahan, to manage your own finances. You just have to get off your butt and learn how the system functions, no excuses! I read this book while viewing the Seahank/Eagles MNF game for it was a terrible game.
E**H
Interesting book on how financial advisors / managers view their personal finances
This book is not another "how to" on how to pick stocks, or day trade, or mimic Charlie Munger or find good dividend-payers.... The book clearly states that is not its purpose. What the book does do (and this is something I've never seen before) is to explain how financial advisors, fund managers, etc. approach their own money and their general philosophies of wealth and money. It tries to explain how these people approach money from a personal level....what do they do with their personal finances? In the majority of cases, these people may approach their personal finances in dramatically different ways than how they approach other people's money. A very interesting, enjoyable and enlightening read.
R**N
Pretty good
I’ve been in a reading rut but this has been an interesting and entertaining book to have picked up recently. I think some of the commentators’ views of money and financial goals make it worth the read. Some are less interesting.
R**E
The narration leaves something to be desired
The tone of voice of the narrator is too salesy. It gets in the way of the message. The message is OK.
D**G
A critical missing piece in investment writing
I feel like my investment bookshelf is full of great ideas that, at the end of the day, I rarely follow. I have some of the very best, now out of print, hard to find tomes on everything from Japanese technical analysis techniques to the intricacies of how financial back office operations work. But there's always been a little bit missing -- a bridge from the theoretical to the personal. Like the authors, I've spent a career in Finance, in media, writing columns and books, and nobody ever asks me what I do with my own money. Honestly I'm glad because the answer would be -- before reading this book -- a little embarrassing in it's simplicity. And that's the genius of this book. It's not a "how to" book. It's not going to help you make a perfect portfolio or implement that razor-sharp tax management strategy. What it's going to do is walk you through dozens of ways that smart people in the business actually manage not just their money, but their lives. Whether it's Morningstar's Christine Benz admitting she has no passion for investing, and that's OK, or Betterment's Dan Egan talking about why owning a plot of land he never intends to sell is more important than more stock in his IRA, the book frankly just made me breath a little deeper and thing "OK, so maybe I'm not alone in thinking this dollar-chasing bro-sphere we see on TV isn't all there is." Structurally, it's also refreshing to read something ostensibly "work related" that is fun to read. The chapters are short, and punchy, and each one is different than the next. The biggest compliment a selfish writer like me can give is "darnit, why didn't I think to write this book." Yep.
R**O
I found this a great read. I was surprised by how normal the life, family, investing experience was for all these successful contributors. Sometimes perhaps it’s easy to think others have more fortunate and dazzling lives. This book showed similar stories we all have. It was inciteful, the investing styles, sometimes contradictory to each other. I’m glad I read this and recommend it for others to read.
P**A
Josh the book just arrived this morning here in London, UK. It's the first book I've ever pre-orderer and the first one that hasn't come by recommendation or through syllabus requirement during my studies. I've watched you on CNBC for a while and just had a feeling the book would be right up my street. I can confirm 24 pages in that I can't put it down. It's a fantastic read and grabs you straight off the bat resonating with my own perspective of finance and investment. Love the personal and down to earth insights you have managed to collect from the lives of these professional investors. Great Read! All the best. Perry
A**T
Nice book to understand how 25 financial experts invest money, their perspectives and personal stories.
S**A
Ottimo libro che racconta come investono i loro risparmi dei professionisti del settore, vari insider del mercati finanziari. Ogni uno di intervistati ha scritto un breve esse sul tema. Consiglio!
R**Y
With this book you get is a diverse selection of people involved in the investment industry who talk about their own backgrounds and personal experiences with investing. It's definitely not a "how-to" book on investing, although certainly there is something to be learned. What I took from it, and appreciate, is that one's approach to investing might not always match the theoretical ideal. Furthermore, there are different ideas as to what that ideal might be. Your investing process can be a kind of journey, changing as you change. So much of investing, and finance in general, is psychological rather than economic or mathematical; what this book gave me is permission not to beat myself just because I haven't achieved the ideal investment strategy. For that reason alone, it is worth every penny.
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