Quote from Yannis:
Jack,
Thanks for your suggestions - I have a similar viewpoint.
My dream is that he get to understand a very good field, rich in interesting concepts and clearly influential in his life.
Also, that he get a peek into the issue of the fear/greed demons we all have to struggle against.
With some luck, if he sticks with it, he may also acquire a valuable skill that could help him a lot in his life, whatever his chosen career may turn out to be.
you are going to have a blast.
The O'Neil book is "How to Make Money in Stocks"
Read chapters 1 through 7 for the first few days. Then set up Stocktables.com for him to do the sorts on CANSLIM.
Today's protfolios can be run on clearstation.com quite nicely.
To have a nice reference for him use Technical analysis from A to Z by the prez of equis, Achelis.
TC2000 has a text they recommend for beginners. It's by Meyers and matches the front end of Achelis.
The NYSE still gives away "7 Keys to Value".
I always loved when my students send away for the annual reports. Some companies behaved like ninnies it is true. Because my students didn't have computers and it was centuries before dailygraphs.com they plotted by hand daily and kept there charts along the wall of annual reports.
The BS you are getting from some people here is really amusing. Students do HARD WORK all the time and they see the supreme values the free enterprise system engenders. It is, if fact, the best reality check young people will ever see. Absolutely every idea goes through the free enterprise chain of events. Nothing starts big and it is amazing to see the continual assimulation of this process.
One of my former students asked for the reading list for the course he took as a sixth former when he got married after Princeton and Wharton. A few years back I saw in the Alum Mag he was given their business man of the year Award. He was running the bond dept of then Lehman bros. This is coincidence I know, but it was neat to see a person and his bride thinking about reading some stuff.
Two books were: Beat the Dealer and How to Lie with Statistics. I just never ever got over how much fun it is to learn. LOL... I started writing books myself at one point.