Here is the January 2012 Books2Wealth Book of the Month. This is a fascinating read and may well be a great idea to pursue.
Disclosure: the
author of this book review has no relationship or financial arrangement with
the author or the publisher of this book. Some publishers and authors do
provide a copy of the book for reviewers to read.
Wishing you success and prosperity,
Daniel R. Murphy
Helping People Learn to Build Wealth
www.Books2Wealth.com
Title and Author: Laughing at Wall Street by Chris Camillo - Book Review
Synopsis of Content:
The subtitle of
this book is “How I beat the pros at investing (by reading Tabloids, shopping
at the Mall, and connecting on Facebook) and how you can too. This is a good
summary of what this book is about.
The author,
Chris Camillo is touted as one of the most successful amateur investors in the
world. His claim is that from September 2007 until the book came out in April
2010 his self-managed investment portfolio appreciated from $83,752 to
$2,388,311. A schedule of that performance is available at his website,
chriscamillo.com.
Camillo’s method
is to be acutely observant of trends and hot products as observed at the malls,
in internet media, and from what he sees on television and in tabloid
publications. The idea is that demand for a particular product or service can
skyrocket for reasons that Wall Street often is unaware of and that if you
purchase the stock of the company involved before Wall Street is wise to the
trend and sell as soon as Wall Street sees the trend you can realize some serious
gain. Camillo demonstrates in the book in some detail how he has done this to
grow his portfolio so impressively.
He tells us that
the traditional, mostly white, male and middle aged Wall Street types are not
plugged into the popular trends that drive these kinds of market demand. They
rely on corporate reports and mainstream financial news reporting neither of
which report these trends until they are old news.
He offers
examples including observations of a hot new shoe that he observed on the beach
before it became well known in financial circles and a brand of clothing that
the Obama first family wore at the inauguration which sparked a buying spree
sending stock prices up fast.
Camillo gives
some attention to traditional fundamental and technical trading methods and
tells us how and why they are not dependable. He then discusses how this
popular trend watching is superior. His method requires a lot of observation,
web browsing and a form of due diligence to insure that the trend he suspects
he is seeing is genuine and that the stock market is not yet aware of it on
Wall Street. He then dives in, buys this stock and waits for it to peak when it
becomes common knowledge.
The appeal of
Camillo’s approach is that it does not require any specialized knowledge of
stocks, the market as a whole, technical treading techniques or fundamental
analysis of company management which Warren Buffet is famous for. This method
could be done by anyone who is observant and disciplined and willing to do the
leg work required. A high school student could do it and have done so.
As with any
method at making money this one requires significant time and effort. This is
not really a get-rich-quick scheme, although Camillo has demonstrated some
remarkable performance in his trading using it. It is not about day trading
either, he waits until he identifies a genuine potential money maker, buys and
holds the stock until it takes off and market demand ends the upward ride, then
sells before it comes down again once everyone knows about it.
It must also be
observed that the author is a professional market researcher by trade, this is
what he does for a living, and in that he watches market trends for a living he
starts out with some advantage over the novice.
This method is clearly
not for everyone. It takes time and commitment to the methodology and some
awareness and understanding of market trends for a specific product or service
that are not yet common knowledge. It does appear however to offer a unique and
very accessible method of beating the market odds for someone willing to do the
work in the manner he illustrates. For anyone who has the time and willingness
to learn this method there is clearly potential to beat the index fund averages.
This book is a
must read for anyone looking for an accessible and relatively simple method to
capture market gains.
Usefulness:
For the person
with some money to invest and the time and self-discipline to apply this method
this book is an excellent primer on a novel and promising way to increase gain
on equity investments.
Disclaimer: all
investment methods carry some risk including this one. This review should not
be relied upon as professional investment or financial advice. See a
professional financial advisor for professional advice.
Readability/Writing Quality:
The book is very
readable and easy to follow. It is well organized.
Notes on Author:
Chris
Camillo is a market researcher who has been less than impressed with more
traditional stock trading methods and has used his own power of observation to
beat the averages on the market.
Related Website:
Three Great Ideas You Can Use:
1. If
traditional market analysis is not for you and you do not want to leave the
management of your investment portfolio to a professional manager there is a
method that most anyone can use to learn about promising stocks before they
take off.
2. This method
requires continued time observing and learning about products and services and
the emerging market trends that one can observe at the local mall, on Facebook,
and many other places. It then requires some due diligence to insure that you
have observed a genuine large scale trend that will pump up the value of stock.
3. If you follow
a proven method taking care to do the homework you can improve your odds with
stocks. You have to read the book though to learn the details of how it is
done.
Publication Information:
Laughing at Wall Street by Chris Camillo
Copyright 2011
by Chris Camillo. Published by St. Martin’s Press.
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Total Rating Score:
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4
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Writing Style:
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5
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Who Should Read This:
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Anyone willing
to learn and devote some time to a unique method of increasing returns on
investments in the market.
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Usefulness:
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4
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Difficulty:
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2
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Scoring System:
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1: poor / 2:
average / 3: good / 4: very good / 5: superior
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Wishing you success and prosperity,
Daniel R. Murphy
Helping People Learn to Build Wealth
www.Books2Wealth.com
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