CLASSIC 13

SECURITY ANALYSIS

02 May 2022

On today’s classic episode, Preston and Stig are reading Security Analysis by Benjamin Graham. 

Benjamin Graham was Warren Buffett’s professor when he studied at Columbia University. Buffett has said that together with The Intelligent Investor and The Wealth of Nations the most profound investment book he has ever read is Security Analysis. 

The book was published back in 1940 and is filled with timeless investing principles that every investor should know. That being said it is a very hard book to read if you’re new to investing. Thus, this episode will provide you with the most important takeaways in this week’s classic episode. 

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Why The Intelligent Investor is Warren Buffett’s favorite book.
  • Why inflation is perhaps the most overlooked macro investing metric.
  • When and how you should conduct active and passive investing.
  • Why Warren Buffett thinks that chapter 8 and 20 are the two most important chapters of The Intelligent Investor in investment literature.
  • How to calculate the intrinsic value of a stock and why Preston and Stig disagree with Warren Buffett.

TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Stig Brodersen 00:00

On today’s classic episode, Preston and I are reading Security Analysis by Benjamin Graham. Our episode was originally published as episode 62 back in November 2015. 

Benjamin Graham was Warren Buffett’s professor when he studied at Columbia University. Buffett has said that together with The Intelligent Investor and The Wealth of Nations the most profound investment book he has ever read is Security Analysis. 

The book was published back in 1940 and is filled with timeless investing principles that every investor should know. That being said it is a very hard book to read if you’re new to investing. 

Therefore, we decided to provide you with the most important take-aways in this week’s classic episode. 

Preston Pysh  01:05

Hey, how’s everybody doing out there? This is Preston Pysh. I’m your host for The Investor’s Podcast. And as usual, I’m accompanied by my co-host Stig Brodersen out in Denmark.

Stig and I are reading a long book right now. We just finished up our last episode with Tren and we’re talking about Charlie Munger. We’re reading a long book and so we needed a little bit of extra time to be able to get through that book.

So Stig and I were saying, “Which books have we read in the past that we could do an episode on?” And the one book that came to mind was this book called “Security Analysis.” I know there’s a lot of people out there who are always hearing us talk about the “Security Analysis,” but today’s episode, we’re going to go into a little bit of depth to talk about what we know about this book.

01:47

So, before we start diving in and talking about this particular book, I think it’s important for us to give the proper amount of context for people to understand what it is that we’re about to talk about today. Warren Buffett has a quote saying that “Security “Analysis,” “The Intelligent Investor,” and the “Wealth of Nations” were three very influential books shaping his life. He also has another one that he’s read called “Common Stock and Uncommon Profits by Philip Fisher. He says that that makes up about 15% of his investing philosophy, as he’s broke that down into a percent.

But the one that we’re going to focus on, as I said, is “Security Analysis.” So, I want to start off by reading the foreword in “Security Analysis,” which was written by Warren Buffett. The book starts off and it’s four or five paragraphs here. So, I’m just going to read the whole thing and let you guys hear directly from Warren Buffett’s quote.

02:38

So, this is Warren Buffett’s foreword. “There are four books in my overflowing library that I particularly treasure. Each of them was written more than 50 years ago, although it would still be of enormous value to me if I were going to read them today for the first time. Their wisdom endures through their pages fade. Two of those books are first editions of the “Wealth of Nations” by Adam Smith and that was written in 1776. And the “Intelligent Investor” by Benjamin Graham written in 1949. A third is an original copy of the book you’re holding in your hands, Benjamin Graham and David Dodd’s “Security Analysis.” I studied from “Security Analysis” while I was at Columbia University in 1950 and 1951 when I had extraordinarily good luck to have Ben Graham and David Dodd as teachers. Together, the book and the men changed my life.”

So, he keeps going here, there’s a little bit more, but at the very end he says, and so the fourth book was a very special edition that David Dodd’s daughter gave to Warren Buffett. It was their original handwritten notes that David Dodd had of this book. So, that just shows you how much this book means to Warren. And it’s pretty amazing to know that he got the original copy written by David Dodd.

03:50

So, a lot of people don’t know David Dodd’s influence on the book, but David Dodd was basically like a teacher’s assistant to Benjamin Graham. He assisted Benjamin Graham, and when Benjamin Graham was giving his lectures in class, David Dodd was working very hard to write down everything and make sure it was all captured. And then it was compiled into this book. So, that was David Dodd’s role.

A lot of the thoughts and a lot of the ideas of how Graham thought, those were all Graham’s ideas, for the most part, from my understanding, those were Graham’s thoughts. And David was more of a scribe when you look at “Security Analysis” now. I’m sure David Dodd had some of his thoughts that he put in here, but for the most part, a lot of people out their attribute most of the ideas in this book to Benjamin Graham. So, that’s the start.

04:38

Now, the book that I purchased when I first started learning, and my poor book here is literally falling apart and Stig can attest. I’m showing it to him over the screen and see the pages are literally falling out because I referenced this thing so much. And I’ve got so many handwritten notes through this thing. I just love this book. This is hands down one of my most favorite and prized possessions.

But aside from that, when I got my first book. I got the sixth edition of this book. And that was a mistake to be quite honest with you. I didn’t know any better. And in the sixth edition, they took out a bunch of the chapters in this book. I don’t even know how many chapters were taken out. But it’s a lot. And that was one of the things that I didn’t know when I purchased this, but they had removed a lot of the chapters from the original book, and the book is still huge. I don’t know how many pages this is… 766 pages.

Stig Brodersen  05:08

And they probably just took off the chapters that they knew no one would read or just the hints…

Preston Pysh  05:30

Yeah, the ones on the speculative features and that stuff, they just totally axed them out of the book. Now, what you’ll find is they gave an accompanying CD that came with the book. I’m looking here in part two, six chapters aren’t even included out of the, you call it 10 or 15 chapters for that section. So, that’s frustrating to me that you don’t have a hard copy of that.

Now, where it came in useful though, is they gave you a CD that’s attached to the book. The CD comes with the book, and it’s a PDF of the entire book. It doesn’t have those chapters removed off of the disk that you got. And so, in a way, that’s the sixth edition. I liked it because I could search for terms through the PDF file, I could search for things that saved me a ton of time, instead of trying to flip through the book or find where I had tabbed it for certain notes. So, that’s one nice feature of the sixth edition.

06:33

So, there’s the give and take, if you’re trying to decide which version of “Security Analysis” to buy. So, anyway, Stig and I, and a lot of people might not know this, but Stig and I wrote an executive summary of this book because it is so difficult. I remember the first time I tried reading this, I was like, “What in the world is in this book?” And it was very difficult for me and to be honest with you the first time I tried to read it, I didn’t read it at all. I was struggling and knew there was important information in it, but I didn’t understand the terminology. And I think that that’s probably the most important thing I tell a lot of young investors when I’m talking to people, is I tell them to learn the terminology.

Stig, you’d like to use the reference of traveling to another country and not knowing the language and I think that’s a fantastic example. I’ll let Stig say. It’s a great example.

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BOOKS AND RESOURCES

  • Stig’s Chapter by Chapter video course for: The Intelligent Investor.
  • Preston and Stig’s summary book for: The Intelligent Investor – Read Reviews of this Book.
  • Benjamin Graham’s original book: The Intelligent Investor – Read Review of this book.
  • Preston and Stig’s summary book for: Security Analysis – Read Review of this book.
  • Benjamin Graham’s original book: Security Analysis – Read Review of this book.
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