The Intelligent Investor - 04
===Chapter 2 :The Investor and Inflation
Unfortunately, real-estate values are also subject易受...的影響?
to wide fluctuations; serious errors can be made in
location, price paid, etc.;?
There’s another reason investors overlook the importance of inflation:
what psychologists call the “money illusion.”?
-
If you receive a 2% raise in a year when inflation runs at 4%,?
you will almost certainly feel better than you will if you take?
a 2% pay cut during a year when inflation is zero.?
two inflation-fightershave become widely available to investors:
1. Real Estate Investment Trusts
2.Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities? ???
===CHAPTER 3 A Century of Stock-Market History: The Level of Stock Prices in Early 1972
The work of a financial analyst falls somewhere in the middle
between that of a mathematician and of an orator演說(shuō)家.
You’ve got to be careful if you don’t know where you’re going,
’cause you might not get there.
★The intelligent investor must never forecast the future?
exclusively專(zhuān)門(mén)地 by extrapolating /?k'str?p?le?t/ 推算 the past.?
★★★
Graham urges the intelligent investor to ask some simple, skeptical questions:
-Why should the future returns of stocks always be the same as their
past returns??
-When every investor comes to believe that stocks are guaranteed to?
make money in the long run, won’t the market end up
being wildly overpriced??
-And once that happens, how can future returns possibly be high?
The profits that companies can earn are finite, the price that?
investors should be willing to pay for stocks must also be finite.
Even though investors all know they’re supposed to buy low and
sell high, in practice they often end up getting it backwards.
-
Graham’s warning in this chapter is simple: “By the rule of opposites,”?
the more enthusiastic investors become about the stock market in the?
long run, the more certain they are to be proved wrong in the short run.
Considering how calamitously wrong the “experts” were the last time?
they agreed on something, why on earth should the intelligent?
investor believe them now?
★The stock market’s performance depends on three factors:
?real growth (the rise of companies’ earnings and dividends)
?inflationary growth (the general rise of prices throughout the
economy)
?speculative growth—or decline (any increase or decrease in the
investing public’s appetite for stocks)
The only thing you can be confident of while forecasting?
future stock returns is that you will probably turn out to be?
wrong. The only indisputable無(wú)可爭(zhēng)辯的 truth that the past teaches?
us is that the future will always surprise us—always!
-
And the corollary推論 to that law of financial history is that the?
markets will most brutally surprise the very people who are most?
certain that their views about the future are right.
★★Staying humble about your forecasting powers, as Graham did,?
will keep you from risking too much on a
view of the future that may well turn out to be wrong.
So, by all means務(wù)必, you should lower your expectations—but take care
not to depress使沮喪 your spirit. For the intelligent investor, hope always
springs躍起 eternal /?'t??n(?)l/ 永恒的
, because it should. In the financial markets, the worse
the future looks, the better it usually turns out to be.?