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From the legendary iconoclast comes a brilliant insider account that is as much the tale of a storied career it is as a vivid, propulsive history of the last sixty years of the stock market itselfAs a kid from working-class Yorkshire, Jeremy Grantham once won seven games of Monopoly in a single evening—he figured out the most efficient property on the board and went all in. So begins the wry and candid story of a career in value investing driven by a few simple ideas: buy cheap, watch for bubbles, and stick to your guns when you know you’re right. Deep curiosity about the history of the market and its fundamental behavior keeps Grantham one step ahead, creating some of the first index funds in the 1970s and the first quantitative funds in the 1980s (with the help of a washing machine-sized computer). He earns a reputation for loudly and accurately predicting bubbles but also learns by painful experience why so few others will: “It is terrible business to blow the whistle on a major bull market.” Grantham’s firm skyrockets from $250 million to a peak of $155 billion in assets under management. But as his wealth grows, so do his fears about the deficiencies of capitalism and the unfolding environmental crisis.
With wit that’s as cutting against himself as his critics, Grantham reveals how hunting for bargains requires understanding the deep absurdities of the market and the very human rules that drive it. As he demonstrates again and again—to stay the course when the market is wrong, you need to be willing to endure furious clients and a lot of money lost in the meantime. “The best ideas eventually come out on top,” Grantham says, “but sadly there's no guarantee you won't go out of business waiting.” That you might lose your job for being right is at the root of the short-termism that dominates so much of the investing landscape, and such thinking has had disastrous results in a world facing existential long-term problems like climate change, to which Grantham has dedicated his fortune. Ultimately, Grantham offers a deeply human, often heretical, and quietly profound lens on investing today.
About the author
Jeremy Grantham is cofounder and long-term investment strategist of GMO and Founder of the Grantham Foundation for the Protection of the Environment. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and received the Carnegie Medal for Philanthropy in 2017. He lives in London.
Edward Chancellor is the author of
Devil Take the Hindmost: A History of Financial Speculation, a
New York Times Notable Book of the Year, and
The Price of Time: The Real Story of Interest, winner of the 2023 Hayek Book Prize. Chancellor has also edited two investment books,
Capital Account and
Capital Returns. An award-winning financial journalist, Chancellor is currently a columnist for
Reuters Breakingviews, and has contributed to many other publications, including the
Wall Street Journal,
MoneyWeek,
New York Review of Books, and
Financial Times. He lives in London.