
The Intelligent Investor
by Benjamin Graham
Editorial review
Warren Buffett has called this the best book on investing ever written, and serious investors continue to agree. The 1973 revised edition with Jason Zweig's modern commentary remains the standard.
AI-generated summary
Graham, the founding figure of value investing, distinguishes between investment and speculation, introduces 'Mr. Market' as a metaphor for short-term price volatility, and argues for a margin-of-safety discipline that has shaped the careers of his most famous students.
Key takeaways
- 1
Investment requires a margin of safety — both numerical and temperamental.
- 2
Mr. Market is bipolar; treat his daily quotes as offers, not verdicts.
- 3
Most retail investors lose to the index — the discipline of being defensive is itself an edge.
- 4
Knowing what you don't know is half of competence.
The right reader
Anyone managing their own money, especially before they make their second mistake. Read Zweig's commentary alongside the original.
What it touches
How it reads
Sober, methodical, foundational.
Reading difficulty: Moderate