asset allocation strategy

Pixel art poster reading “STOCKS FOR THE LONG RUN” showing Jeremy Siegel holding an open book, surrounded by stacked coins, rising charts, a large clock, asset category books, and a “STAY INVESTED!” checklist.
Books

Stocks for the Long Run Book Review: Jeremy Siegel’s Best Case for Equities, Inflation Protection, and Long-Term Wealth

Jeremy J. Siegel’s Stocks for the Long Run answers the timeless investor question, “Is it different this time?” with history, data, and a calm argument for patience. Rather than focusing on stock picks or tactical trades, Siegel makes the long-horizon case for equities as the core wealth-building asset class, emphasizing compounding, the equity risk premium, and the importance of staying invested through cycles. For MBA readers, the book delivers a valuable framework for thinking about inflation, real returns, and the behavioral advantage of endurance over market timing.

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Pixel art poster reading “WINNING THE LOSER’S GAME” showing an older investor holding a “STAY DISCIPLINED” flag, with tennis imagery, rising charts, a “KEEP COSTS LOW” calculator, portfolio pie chart, and financial planning icons.
Books

Winning the Loser’s Game Book Review: Charles D. Ellis’s Best Lesson on Discipline, Asset Allocation, and Avoiding Unforced Errors

Charles D. Ellis’s Winning the Loser’s Game is one of the most MBA-relevant investing books ever written because it argues that investing success is less about brilliance and more about discipline. Ellis compares modern investing to amateur tennis, where most points are lost through unforced errors rather than won through spectacular plays. In markets, those errors show up as overtrading, chasing performance, paying high fees, and reacting to headlines instead of sticking to a plan. The book’s solution is simple and powerful: build a policy portfolio, keep costs low, rebalance on schedule, and let long-term compounding do the heavy lifting.

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