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The Dhandho Investor: The Low - Risk Value Method to High Returns
by Mohnish Pabrai
from Wiley
Customer Reviews:
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 / 5.0 
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Good read 
I read 2 Kiyosaki books before this one so it was a good change of pace. He provided a lot of examples but but I wish there was a little more "how-to". Overall a good read.
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A Great Book but... 
This was a great book by someone who had great market results. He clearly states his objectives and how to do it. he gives great examples so we can follow his footsteps. However he used to have amazing returns (even better ROI than Warren Buffet). But since I got the book, almost 2 years ago, he has not been doing well at all in his fund. So I am not sure yet that his system works in the longer term. Right now he is way down this year.
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Save your time and money 
I am not trying to hate on this book - I saw a review of this on CNBC and they selected one passage and I was really intrigued by the idea of "heads i win, tails i dont lose much" (by the way, the book repeats this north of 20-30+ times and I got extremely sick of this as I went half-way through the book) and decided to read this on my own time. I have always found a lot of credibility in analysis driven by limited downside risk or "value" investing in the sense of investing at close to book value or when... more info
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trite, simplistic analysis written for a sixth grader 
An easy read but essentially trivial. A hotelier example and a few other vignettes are used to make the case that there's a free lunch (no risk, high reward). As if it was that easy. Actually the hotelier example (investing a couple of million in a hotel in the middle of the So Cal desert, after 9/11, that just happened to work out) makes the case there is no free lunch. A better book is by Dreman, on contrarian investments, or "Fortune's Formula" by Poundstone, if you're into this thesis of a free... more info
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