Quote from TheSorcerer:
Hello, I am a new stock investor/trader. Can you guys recommend me some good books on investing as well as trading?
Welcome to ET
If I may suggest, to obtain constructive advice on this forum you must show your due diligence on attempting to locate this information on your own. If not, well review the previous replies.
IMHO
First you must determine your intentions, trading or investing. The two are completely different and require different skill sets. If you determine that trading fits your personality and abilities then you must determine what type of trading you intend. Position, Swing, Intraday, options, futures, etfs, stocks (long/short) etc...
I am a relative newbie as well and to follow is my initial reading list. The topics on asset allocation and index funds are good primers on investing basics... encyclopedia on chart patterns and toni turners beginner guides on day and short term trading are good beginning reading as well... Benjamin Graham's the intelligent investor is a must read, a investing classic.
The Intelligent Investor, Benjamin Graham
The interpretation of Financial Statements, Benjamin Graham
Value Investing from Graham to Buffett and beyond, Greenwald, Kahn
The Four Pillars of Investing, William Bernstein
The Intelligent Asset Allocator, William Bernstein
Asset Allocation, Roger C. Gibson
All About Asset Allocation, Richard A. Ferrari
All About Index Funds, Richard A. Ferrari
Bogle on Mutual Funds, John C. Bogle
Common Sense on Mutual Funds, John C. Bogle
Global Investing, Ibbotson & Brinson
A Random Walk Down Wall Street, Burton G. Malkiel
Financial Statements, Thomas Ittelson
Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns, Thomas M. Bulkowski
Technical Analysis from A to Z, Steven B. Achelis
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets, John J. Murphy
Technical Analysis of Stock Trends 9th edition, Edwards, Magee & Bassetti
How to get started in Electronic Day Trading, David S. Nassar
The Master Swing Trader, Alan S. Farley
Beginners guide to day trading online, Toni Turner
Beginners guide to short-term trading, Toni Turner
Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques, Steve Nison
If you intend on trading, anticipate at least 1-year of reading and paper trading to develop a consistently profitable system prior to risking ANY money, until then you are best served to place your money in a money market fund at 5%...
The most important term you will learn in your quest for knowledge in investing/trading is Capital conservation....
Investopedia is an excellent resource to learn financial terms.
Also, fyi, the green arrow, red arrow programs are snake oil... they are basically candy coated technical analysis indicators and oscillators... you must understand the underlying information the arrows are derived from and base your trading/investing decisions from that information and have a strong fundamental understanding. Not from black box system's. Think about it, if the systems worked, why sell them and not just trade them to wealth...?
Hope this helps,
Good luck and safe trading...