What are the best investing books according to the world’s best investors? To find out, I sought out the recommended books of 20 of the most successful investors and hedge fund managers of all time.
I curated a total of 246 book recommendations, combined them into a spreadsheet and sorted them by count. The result is a list of the best investing books ranked by the number of recommendations each one received.
You can view the data in its raw form here.
Note that in cases where two books were tied, I ranked them based on my own preferences.
Here’s a list of each of the books that scored more than three recommendations. At the end of the post, you’ll also find a list of some of the most recommended quantitative finance books.
The Best Investing Books of All Time
#1. The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham
Number of recommendations: 9
Recommended by: Bill Ackman, Bruce Berkowitz, Warren Buffett, Michael Burry, Joel Greenblatt, Seth Klarman, Mohnish Pabrai, Walter Schlossl and Guy Spier.
Warren Buffett has called The Intelligent Investor, “by far the best book on investing ever written.”
He continues: “Chapters 8 and 20 have been the bedrock of my investing activities for more than 60 years. I suggest that all investors read those chapters and reread them every time the market has been especially strong or weak.“
First published in 1949, Benjamin Graham’s now-classic book has impacted generations of investors and is recommended by many of today’s well-known hedge fund managers, including, Joel Greenblatt and Michael Burry.
Known as “the father of value investing,” Graham revised the book four times, with the last revision being published in 1971. In 2003, respected Wall Street Journal financial columnist Jason Zweig updated the book with his own commentary and footnotes.
#2. Security Analysis by Benjamin Graham
Number of recommendations: 9
Recommended by: Bill Ackman, Bruce Berkowitz, Warren Buffett, Michael Burry, Joel Greenblatt, John Griffin, Seth Klarman, Walter Schloss and Don Yacktman.
Benjamin Graham’s first book, Security Analysis (co-written with David Dodd), comes in at #2 on the list of best investing books of all time.
Buffet, who also wrote the forward, is quoted on the back cover calling it, “a roadmap for investing that I have now been following for 57 years.”
While Graham’s The Intelligent Investor is by no means a light read, Security Analysis is an even more detailed overview of Graham’s stock picking methods. So if you plan on reading both, I’d start with the former.
The newest version of Security Analysis, published in 2008, includes insight from some of today’s top investors, including Seth Klarman, Howard Marks, Bruce Berkowitz, Bruce Greenwald and others.
#3. You Can Be A Stock Market Genius by Joel Greenblatt
Number of recommendations: 6
Recommended by: Bill Ackman, Michael Burry, David Einhorn, Seth Klarman, Dan Loeb and Guy Spier.
While it’s too popular to be called a hidden gem, it’s fair to say that You Can Be A Stock Market Genius has flown under the radar, ranking at just #60 in Amazon’s finance section.
(Greenblatt’s second book, The Little Book That Beats The Market, is #17.)
You Can Be A Stock Market Genius details how individual investors can use special situation investing to beat the market.
This involves investing in:
- Spin-offs
- Restructurings
- Merger securities
- Rights offerings
- Recapitalizations
- Bankruptcies
- Risk arbitrage
Researching these opportunities does require work — which may be part of the reason why the book hasn’t caught on with mainstream individual investors.
However, with six recommendations out of the 20 lists I reviewed, it’s fair to say that You Can Be A Stock Market Genius has made an impact on many of the best investors of our generation.
#4. The Essays of Warren Buffett
Number of recommendations: 5
Recommended by: Bill Ackman, Bruce Berkowitz, Joel Greenblatt, John Griffin and Don Yacktman.
Coming in at #4 on the list of best investing books of all time are Warren Buffett’s essays and annual letters to shareholders, in which the famed investor shares his wisdom and methods.
Spanning decades of correspondence, there are actually two separate books that have compiled his writing:
- The Essays of Warren Buffett: Lessons for Corporate America, edited by Lawrence Cunningham: an edited version that groups similar topics from different years together.
- Berkshire Hathaway Letters to Shareholders, edited by Max Olson: a compilation of the unedited versions of Warren Buffett’s letters (only $2.99 on Kindle).
Buffett’s unedited letters are also available for free on Berkshire’s website.
#5. The Warren Buffett Way by Robert Hagstrom
Number of recommendations: 5
Recommended by: Bill Ackman, Joel Greenblatt, John Griffin, Howard Marks and Mohnish Pabrai.
There’s no question that Warren Buffett has profoundly shaped the investment community.
Having written decades of letters containing his wisdom (see above) — and never one to back away from an interview — Buffett’s been generous in sharing his investment philosophy over the years.
So it’s no wonder that his footprints are all over this list of best investing books.
What’s unique about The Warren Buffett Way is that it dives deep into the actual strategies Buffett has used to succeed. It’s the definitive book on his strategies from an outsider’s point of view.
Originally written in 1997, it was revised in 2013 to analyze Buffett’s more recent investments.
#6. Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre
Number of recommendations: 4
Recommended by: Bruce Berkowitz, John Griffin, Dan Loeb and Guy Spier.
Written in 1923, Edwin Lefèvre’s classic Reminiscences of a Stock Operator is not an investing book in the traditional sense. Rather, it’s a fictionalized biography of one of the greatest investors of the time, Jesse Livermore, who made and lost millions multiple times throughout his career.
His most famous move was shorting the market in 1929 — immediately before the crash that marked the beginning of the Great Depression.
Livermore ended his own life in 1940, after losing most of what he made (which was reportedly over $100 million).
His life story remains relevant today for its views on investor psychology, speculation, and the nature of the market.
#7. Margin of Safety by Seth Klarman
Number of recommendations: 4
Recommended by: Bill Ackman, David Einhorn, Joel Greenblatt and Guy Spier.
The “margin of safety” is the difference between the intrinsic value of a stock and its market price.
Seth Klarman has used the concept to become one of the most successful hedge fund managers of the day at the Baupost Group.
Often called “the next Warren Buffett” by the media, Klarman is a classic value investor. So it’s no surprise that in this highly-regarded investment book he dives deep into the “margin of safety” philosophy — a classic value investing framework — arguing that it’s the most important concept for investors to understand.
Unfortunately, as the book is out of print, used copies often go for over $1,000. The lowest price for a used copy on Amazon at the time of this writing is $899.
#8. Common Stock, Uncommon Profits and Other Writings by Philip Fisher
Number of recommendations: 3
Recommended by: Michael Burry, Warren Buffet and John Griffin.
Originally published in 1958, Common Stock, Uncommon Profits and Other Writings by Philip Fisher was one of the books that helped shape a young Warren Buffett’s investment philosophy.
Buffett has said about the book:
“I sought out Phil Fisher after reading his Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits […] A thorough understanding of the business, obtained by using Phil’s techniques […] enables one to make intelligent investment commitments.“
With insight into evaluating earnings and management, it’s easy to see how Fisher’s classic book helped Buffett build upon the concepts he learned from Benjamin Graham.
Common Stock, Uncommon Profits and Other Writings was updated by Philip Fisher’s son (popular Forbes columnist Ken Fisher) in 2003.
#9. One Up On Wall Street by Peter Lynch
Number of recommendations: 3
Recommended by: Bill Ackman, John Griffin and Mohnish Pabrai.
Charged with operating the Magellan Fund between 1977 and 1990, Peter Lynch produced an annual average return of 29%, beating the S&P Index in 11 of his 13 years at the helm.
In his book One Up On Wall Street, Lynch explains his philosophy and methods to help the individual investor succeed.
First published in 2000, making it the second-youngest book on the list, One Up On Wall Street has become very popular (boasting over 590 reviews on Amazon) for its insights into how average investors can leverage certain advantages over large money managers.
Its simple approach to investing (one sentence summary: invest in companies you know and love) means there’s no question the book will continue to impact both individual investors and tomorrow’s top hedge fund managers.
#10. Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini
Number of recommendations: 3
Recommended By: Bruce Berkowitz, John Griffin and Charlie Munger.
While you won’t find this book in the investment section of any bookstore, it has clearly had a great impact on the investment world and some of today’s greatest financial leaders.
In fact, when we did a similar experiment that looked at the recommended reading lists of 100 famous CEOs and entrepreneurs, Influence came in at #1.
Written by Robert Cialdini, the book explores how our minds can be easily influenced — and how to prevent it. It’s therefore no surprise that an investor like Charlie Munger, who popularized the idea of mental models, loves the book.
Munger liked the book so much, in fact, that he gifted Cialdine a share of Berkshire Class A stock. The value of that share today is well over $330,000.
#11. The Great Crash 1929 by John Kenneth Galbraith
Number of recommendations: 3
Recommended by: Bruce Berkowitz, Warren Buffett and Jim Chanos.
First published in 1955, economist John Kenneth Galbraith’s The Great Crash explores the events that produced the most damaging economic meltdown in American history, ultimately arguing that it was driven by what he described as “rampant speculation.”
That argument has remained prescient, regardless of the era.
Whether during the “irrational exuberance” of the 90s dot-com bubble, the economic crisis of 2008 (The Independent used arguments from the book to explain why the global economy was collapsing), or today — with stocks like Tesla defying market reality by trading at hundreds of times their future earnings — Galbraith’s warnings serve as important reminders that markets are not perfectly efficient and that trying build wealth by picking and choosing individual stocks is a difficult task.
#12. The Little Book of Common Sense Investing by John C. Bogle
Number of recommendations: 3
Recommended by: Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger and Mohnish Pabrai.
I was happy to see this book make the list, as it’s the investment book I credit for shaping a lot of my views on investing.
I was fortunate enough to read it in my early 20s, at a time when my confidence as an investor — but not my ability — was at an all-time high.
Written by the late John Bogle, who founded Vanguard and invented index funds, this book goes into detail on why an index-based approach to investing is the wiser approach for the non-professional investor (and why it often even beats most professional investors).
Because index investing is such a simple approach, it’s not as much about understanding the details. More so, it’s about getting the big idea and then sticking with the plan to be a disciplined investor through thick and thin.
Bogle’s book, out of any other I’ve read, convinces you that index investing is indeed the right path.
The Best Quantitative Finance Books
Four universities with well-known quantitative finance programs have, at times in the past, posted their suggested reading lists online.
The books that have appeared on at least two of the reading lists from Boston University, Carnegie Mellon, Columbia University and the University of Waterloo are:
- Advanced Modeling in Finance Using Excel and VBA by Mary Jackson and Mike Staunton
- Options, Futures and Other Derivatives by John C. Hull
- Stochastic Processes by Sheldon Ross
- The Complete Guide to Capital Markets for Quantitative Professionals by Alex Kuznetsov
- When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of LTCM by Roger Lowenstein
If you’re looking for the best books on quantitative finance, these five options are a great start. Want to dive deeper? See each reading list in its entirety below.
Note: While there are differences between the terms quantitative finance, computational finance, mathematical finance and financial engineering, for this article the terms were combined.
For each recommendation below, I’ve included a link to the book’s page on Amazon. If you click through and make a purchase, The Ways To Wealth receives a small commission.
Carnegie Mellon Quantitative Finance Reading List
Regarded as one of the top computational finance programs, Carnegie Mellon recommends the following books for students wanting to learn more about the subject.
- Corporate Finance by J. Berk and P. DeMarzo
- The Complete Guide to Capital Markets for Quantitative Professionals by Alex Kuznetsov
- Options, Futures and Other Derivatives by John C. Hull
Columbia University Financial Engineering Reading List
Ranked second on Quantnet’s list of top financial engineering programs, the recommended reading list for incoming students was recently posted on the Quantnet forums.
General Background
- A Demon of Our Own Design: Markets, Hedge Funds, and the Perils of Financial Innovation by Richard Bookstaber
- Capital Ideas by Peter L. Bernstein
- My Life as a Quant by Emanuel Derman
- The Complete Guide to Capital Markets for Quantitative Professionals by Alex Kuznetsov
- When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of LTCM by Roger Lowenstein
Quantitative Background
- A Primer for the Mathematics of Financial Engineering by Dan Stefanica
- Investments by W. F. Sharpe, G. J. Alexander and J. V. Bailey
- The Mathematics of Derivatives: Tools for Designing Numerical Algorithms by Robert L. Navin
Miscellaneous Books On Quantitative Methods
- Advanced Modeling in Finance Using Excel and VBA by Mary Jackson and Mike Staunton
- A First Course in Stochastic Processes by Karlin and Taylor
- Introduction to Probability Models by Sheldon Ross
- Modern Applied Statistics with S-Plus by W. N. Venables, Brian D. Ripley
- Monte Carlo Methods in Financial Engineering by Paul Glasserman
- Simulation by Sheldon M. Ross
- Stochastic Calculus and Financial Applications by J. Michael Steele
- Stochastic Processes by Sheldon Ross
- The Econometrics of Financial Markets by John Y. Campbell, Andrew W. Lo and A. Craig MacKinlay
- C++ Language Tutorial
Boston University Quantitative Finance Reading List
Ranked 12th on Quantnet, incoming students are suggested to read the following books.
General Background
- Options, Futures and Other Derivatives by John C. Hull
- Principles of Financial Engineering by Saleh Neftci
Applied Mathematics
- Black Scholes and Beyond by Neil Chriss
- Stochastic Calculus for Finance I: The Binomial Asset Pricing Model by Steven Shreve
- Stochastic Calculus for Finance II: Continuous-Time Models by Steven Shreve
Computer Science
- Financial Engineering and Computation by Yuh-Dauh Lyuu
- R Cookbook by Paul Teetor
University of Waterloo Quantitative Finance Reading List
Ranked #14 on Quantnet, University of Waterloo lists the following books as recommended reading for prospective students.
Finance
- An Introduction to Mathematical Finance: Options and Other Topics by Sheldon M. Ross
- Derivatives: The Tools that Changed Finance by Phelim P. Boyle and Feidhlim P. Boyle
- Investment Science by David G. Luenberger
- Options, Futures and Other Derivatives by John C. Hull
Probability and Statistics
- Introduction to Mathematical Statistics by Robert Hogg and Allen Craig (Chapters 1-6)
- Stochastic Processes by Sheldon Ross (Chapters 4-6)
Econometrics
- Econometric Analysis by William H. Greene
Real Analysis
- Principles of Mathematical Analysis by W. Rudin (Chapters 1-7)
- Real Analysis by H. Royden and P. Fitzpatrick
Calculus
- Calculus by J. Stewart
Linear Algebra
- Linear Algebra, Mat Labs by T. Lawson
C++
- Accelerated C++: Practical Programming by Example by A. Koenig and B. Moo
- C++: A Beginner’s Guide by H. Schildt
- Effective C++: 55 Specific Ways to Improve Your Programs and Designs by S. Meyers
- Sams Teach Yourself C++ in One Hour a Day by J. Liberty and R. Cadenhead
Python
- Learning Python by M. Lutz
- Programming Python by M. Lutz
- Python Cookbook by D. Beazley and B. K. Jones
- Think Python by Allen B. Downey
MATLAB
- Matlab, Third Edition: A Practical Introduction to Programming and Problem Solving by Stormy Attaway
- Numerical Methods in Finance and Economics: A MATLAB-Based Introduction by Paolo Brandimarte
- Simulation and Optimization in Finance: Modeling with MATLAB, @Risk, or VBA by D. Pachamanova and F. J. Fabozzi
- Stochastic Simulation and Applications in Finance with MATLAB Programs by H. T. Huynh, V. S. Lai and I. Soumare
R
- A Beginner’s Guide to R by A. F. Zuur, E. N. Ieno, and E. Meesters
- Data Manipulation with R by P. Spector
- Introductory Statistics with R by P. Dalgaard
- Introductory Time Series with R by P.S.P. Cowpertwait and A.V. Metcalfe
Excel/VBA
- Advanced Modeling in Finance Using Excel and VBA by Mary Jackson and Mike Staunton
- Credit Risk Modeling using Excel and VBA by G. Löeffler and P. N. Posch
- Excel 2010 Power Programming with VBA by J. Walkenbach
- Next Generation Excel: Modeling in Excel for Analysts and MBAs (For MS Windows and Mac OS) by I. Gottlieb
- Option Pricing Models and Volatility Using Excel-VBA (text only) by F. D. Rouah and G. Vainberg
General Readings in Finance
- How I Became a Quant: Insights from 25 of Wall Street’s Elite by R. Lindsey and B. Schachter
- Liar’s Poker by M. Lewis
- Models Behaving Badly: Why Confusing Illusion with Reality Can Lead to Disaster, on Wall Street and in Life by E. Derman
- The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine by M. Lewis
- When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of LTCM by Roger Lowenstein
Interview Preparation Readings
- A Practical Guide To Quantitative Finance Interviews by X. Zhou
- Cracking the Coding Interview: 150 Programming Questions and Solutions by G. McDowell
- Frequently Asked Questions in Quantitative Finance by P. Wilmott
- Heard on the Street: Quantitative Questions from Wall Street Job Interviews by T. Crack
- Quant Job Interview Questions and Answers by M. Joshi, N. Denson and A. Downes
- Starting Your Career as a Wall Street Quant: A Practical, No-Bs Guide to Getting a Job in Quantitative Finance by B. Jiu
Final Thoughts
If you’re considering a career in investing, these are the must-read books that will help you build a strong foundation in investment strategy, portfolio management and financial decision-making. They’re the classics that have impacted the superinvestors of our time.
While Buffett had the advantage of being taught by Benjamin Graham, some of today’s most successful investors are self-trained through these books. Michael Burry, for example, was trained as a doctor, not a financial professional.
Similarly, Todd Combs, the current CIO of Berkshire Hathaway, famously took Warren Buffett’s advice to read 500 pages a day. Now works directly with Buffett.
As the story goes about Comb’s reading habits:
“Eventually finding and reading productive material became second nature, a habit. As he began his investing career, he would read even more, hitting 600, 750, even 1,000 pages a day. Combs discovered that Buffett’s formula worked, giving him more knowledge that helped him with what became his primary job — seeking the truth about potential investments.”
But it’s important to note that the books on this list are also valuable even if you’re a new investor who plans on investing passively and/or going the index fund route.
Reading even just one investing book from this list will give you a much better understanding of how the economy and market function, and how the people you entrust to manage your money go about making the investment decisions that impact your personal finances and life goals.
Also, there were a few classic books and bestsellers that I was surprised didn’t make the final cut, as they often appear on “best investing books” lists. Some of the most notable omissions include A Random Walk Down Wall Street by Burton Malkiel and Principles: Life and Work by Ray Dalio.
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