Folks—F Wall Street, the book, is now available for preorder online at Amazon.com and Borders.com. (Barnes & Noble isn't listing it just yet.)
Needless to say, I'm excited!
Amazon.com is listing it at $10.85, a discount to the full price when the final release comes out on June 9, 2009. In the spirit of buying assets on the cheap, now might be a good time to preorder your copy!
You can find out more here.
To accompany the release, the website has been updated. If you subscribe to F Wall Street through RSS, you'll notice that you now get the full posts right to your reader.
You can also subscribe through e-mail using the form on the right.
I've recategorized the posts to make a little more sense of the blog. Check it out and let me know your thoughts.
Thanks for all your patience and support! You really make F Wall Street a ton of fun!
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| Excel 2007 | | | Excel 2003 |
| (ZIP, 168kb) | (ZIP, 138kb) |
Thu @ 3:33PM | View comment
MinorityStakes said,
A couple comments regarding BBEP's latest communication with shareholders:* 2009 production just about equaled 2008 production even though capex was...
BreitBurn Energy: Playing the Commodities Crash
Sun @ 11:09AM | View comment
Eric T said,
Instead of inventory turnover, I use the cash conversion cycle, or CCC.It is more accurate for companies that manufacture and...
Understanding the True Profit Margin
Sun @ 5:48AM | View comment
Diversification said,
well it all depends on the correlation between the stocks you have choosen many big mutual funds are having the...
The Dangers Of Overdiversification
Sun @ 4:46AM | View comment
sandesh trivedi said,
Very well explained joe. i believe one must also take into account the nature of the product being manufactured while...
Understanding the True Profit Margin
Sat @ 10:19AM | View comment
Ron said,
Hi Joe,Is there a rule of thumb of percentage of net shares sold by insiders where we should start to...
When To Watch Out For Insider Selling
Sat @ 10:18AM | View comment
jan said,
joe, any thoughts on jackson hewitt? what were the risks that played out in your mind when you decided...
BreitBurn Energy: Playing the Commodities Crash
Jae Jun
Feb 3rd, 2009
12 comments
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Rene
Feb 3rd, 2009
80 comments
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William Zelesny
Feb 3rd, 2009
2 comments
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Jason
Feb 3rd, 2009
16 comments
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Ola
Feb 4th, 2009
Congrats again!
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Jason
Feb 4th, 2009
16 comments
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Sean Gajewski
Feb 4th, 2009
2 comments
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Sean Gajewski
Feb 4th, 2009
2 comments
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Edward Handrich
Feb 6th, 2009
4 comments
Congradulations Joe, not only on the book, but for creating a website that actually educates people and makes it fun in the process. I've learned alot from this blog and I look forward to doing some reading on the beach this summer.
Thank you for everything you've done.
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Ola
Feb 7th, 2009
1 comment
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Widemoat
Feb 7th, 2009
5 comments
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Joel
Feb 8th, 2009
Are there any plans to make the book available for Kindle?
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Amit
Feb 9th, 2009
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Edward Handrich
Feb 11th, 2009
4 comments
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Joe Ponzio
Feb 11th, 2009
Joe on twitter
Ponzio Capital
I don't know if it will be available for Kindle. I will e-mail the publisher as soon as I'm done here, and I'll let you know when I do.
I'd self-publish an audio book, but I'd probably go off on ten thousand tangents and it would end up being a 500 hour podcast :)
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Jay
Feb 20th, 2009
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MikeR
May 14th, 2009
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MikeR
May 14th, 2009
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Joe Ponzio
May 15th, 2009
Joe on twitter
Ponzio Capital
MikeR: Good eye! Definitely a typo. I'll let the publisher know. Thanks!
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MikeR
May 16th, 2009
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MikeR
May 16th, 2009
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Alex MacKinnon
May 16th, 2009
15 comments
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MikeR
May 17th, 2009
I pre-ordered on AMZN and got my copy last week.
Joe,
Page 124 last full paragraph the g is left off the word (g)overnment. I know most of these typos are trivial and obvious, but I am assuming you want to find them for the second printing.
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Joe Ponzio
May 18th, 2009
Joe on twitter
Ponzio Capital
Thanks, MikeR, for your feedback. Clearly the editor missed these typos, though I'm certain that they found many more in my original work! As you find them, please feel free to keep listing them here!
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Rona
May 26th, 2009
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Steve
May 29th, 2009
3 comments
1) In your book you say on page 7 "Most mutual fund companies are paid based on how much money they manage rather than on how well they manage it." However, doesn't your investment firm Meridian Business Group do the same thing by charging a fee on how much money you manage? What is the difference?
2) Your book mostly focuses on businesses with stable growth. However, what would your opinion be of a company that has a market cap of 1B and FCF of 700M with declining FCF. The low market cap and high FCF make the company compelling however is this a cigar butt? This was a very profitable company for many years and then all of a sudden technology made it practically irrelevant. Is this another factor that we should take into account with investing, if future technology changes could possibly help or hurt the company?
3) Any thoughts on my previous post http://www.fwallstreet.co...
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Joe Ponzio
Jun 1st, 2009
Joe on twitter
Ponzio Capital
Steve: Great questions.
It's true that we work off a performance-only fee for certain clients and an asset-based fee for non-qualified clients, but our asset-based fee is just 1% compared to the 1.61% charged by U.S. stock mutual funds in 2008 (excluding any additional fees those investors pay to brokers or advisors for putting them in those mutual funds). If we can't work on a performance-only basis for the client with $50,000 at our firm, I don't know of a better way to keep us accountable than asset-based fees.
Let's say that the business shuts down in five years and pays out to shareholders $1 billion in net assets (say, $50 per share). The most you could pay today to earn 15% a year would be $25. Over five years, $25 to $50 is about 15% a year.
In any investment, you have to figure out how much cash you, as an owner, could pull out during its remaining life. I don't know if I made that abundantly clear in the book, but I think that reading the book and this website should help clarify things. Let me know if that helps.
If you keep in mind that these are businesses, and that you can shun stocks and instead invest in private businesses, real estate, art, or anything else in the world of investment opportunities, you'll realize that there's no need to settle for mediocre stocks. Buy the best (or cheapest based on valuations) stocks, and leave the rest for the mutual fund managers. If you can't find opportunities in stocks, go buy an apartment building or dry cleaner. Make sense?
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Your Name
Mar 12th, 2010