Praise For Investment Secrets From PIMCO’s Bill Gross
‘No investor is held in higher regard by his peers than Bill Gross.
His understanding of the markets and his insights on how to profit
from them are unparalleled. Now, Tim Middleton takes you into
Gross’s world for an insider’s view on how the world of finance
really works. If this book were a bond, it would be AAA rated with
a double-digit yield.’
-DON PHILLIPS, Managing Director, Morningstar, Inc.
‘The secret to investment success is discipline. In bonds, nobody
has displayed better discipline than Bill Gross. And nobody has
done a better job of explaining Gross’s methods, and instructing
private investors how they can exploit his approach, than Tim
Middleton.’
-JON MARKMAN, Columnist, CNBC on MSN Money
‘Warren Buffett, John Neff, Bill Miller, Peter Lynch-the stock
market has always had dominant personalities whose long-term
success becomes legend. In the bond market, that dominant
personality is Gross.’
-FORTUNE
‘Bill Gross is the Emeril Lagasse of bond managers.’
-FORBES
‘If you want to get a stock mutual fund manager steamed, ask why
his fund can’t beat bond guru Bill Gross.’
-USA TODAY
Tabla de materias
Foreword.
Preface.
Acknowledgments.
PART I: GROSS THE MAN.
Introduction.
Chapter 1. From $200 to Half a Billion.
Chapter 2. Total Return Investing.
Chapter 3. The Gifts of the Magi.
PART II: TOTAL RETURN INVESTING.
Chapter 4. A Waterlogged World.
Chapter 5. All Bonds Are Divided into Three Parts.
Chapter 6. Taking Taxes Off the Table.
Chapter 7. Where the ‘Oh, Boys!’ Are.
PART III: THE ROYAL APPROACH.
Chapter 8. How to Invest for the Next Five Years.
Chapter 9. The Ways of the King.
Sources.
Bibliography.
Index.
Sobre el autor
Timothy Middleton is a columnist for CNBC’s MSN Money and a contributor to CNBC television. He also does weekend business reports for WCBS Radio in New York. Middleton was formerly a mutual funds columnist for the New York Times, and a contributor to such periodicals as Money magazine, Worth, and Bloomberg Personal. A financial journalist for twenty-five years, he has been an editor of Dow Jones News Service and Crain’s New York Business, a writer for the Abreast of the Market column for the Wall Street Journal Europe, and a speechwriter for the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Middleton was a Davenport Fellow in Reporting on Business and the Economy at the University of Missouri.