Resources
Updates to Jasons Products
All updates are saved in
Adobe PDF format, so you will need the Adobe Reader to view
and print them. The reader is a free download which you can get
by clicking the button to the left. If you bought the product
after the date of the update, you don't need the update.
Total Eldercare Management
out of print
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1 July 2003 - Page 53
[PDF 75 KB]
FREE
Corrects an error in the "Trading Down" bullet about the capital gain exclusion that
applies to selling your primary residence. Simply click the
link above, print out the page, punch three holes in it, and replace
your old page 53 with the new one. Page 54 and onward remain
unchanged.
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Updates to TNLGT Stock Market Investing, 2010 Edition
The stock market is ever-evolving. I use this section to inform you
of updates to The Neatest Little Guide to Stock Market Investing, 2010 Edition
that are not yet included in the book. The updates will be added in future printings or
future editions. Here they are:
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First One Here
So far, so good. No new updates yet.
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Typos in TNLGT Stock Market Investing, 2010 Edition
There are some typos in The Neatest Little Guide to Stock Market Investing,
2010 Edition. Plume
and I apologize for any confusion. If you find another typo, please use
the button below the list to report it to me. Here they are:
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Pages 174-175
Some text in the Value Line page was mysteriously reformatted so that it flows
outside the borders of the page. Nobody knows what went wrong, as the page was a PDF
received directly from Value Line. Plume never touched its content, but just placed it where it was supposed to go. Thus, we suspect somebody at the printer came to work after a few too many the night before, and then worked pretty hard to screw this up. The whole point of PDFs is that their format is locked, unbreakable, the same on any platform. Naturally, nobody's talking at the printer. The page still illustrates the points I make in the section, despite the improper format, but for a perfectionist like me the botched PDF is hard to look at.
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Updates to TNLGT Stock Market Investing, 2008 Edition
The stock market is ever-evolving. I use this section to inform you
of updates to The Neatest Little Guide to Stock Market Investing, 2008 Edition
that are not yet included in the book. The updates will be added in future printings or
future editions. Here they are:
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The New Dow
On February 19, 2008, Dow Jones & Company changed two companies listed on
the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The two removed were Altria Group (MO) and
Honeywell International (HON). The two added were
Bank of America (BAC) and Chevron (CVX).
This impacts the Dow list and some examples using Dow companies.
However, it does not affect the strategies discussed in any way, not even the
"Double The Dow" approach.
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Typos in TNLGT Stock Market Investing, 2008 Edition
There are some typos in The Neatest Little Guide to Stock Market Investing,
2008 Edition. Plume
and I apologize for any confusion. If you find another typo, please use
the button below the list to report it to me. Here they are:
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Copyright Page, Library of Congress section
Reads, "The meanest little guide to stock market investing." Should
read, "The neatest little guide." Yes, I know,
my critics are calling this a Freudian slip. They should know that my next book
will be even meaner!
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Page 120, Paragraph 5, Last Sentence
Reads, "You saw this for yourself on pages 38 and 39." Should read, "You saw this for
yourself on pages 12 and 39."
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Pages 156 and 157
The spread shows the July 13, 2007 IBM Value Line page, but the
text describes the January 12, 2007 IBM page. This is a case of good intentions
gone wrong. Value Line thought it was doing my publisher a favor by sending along the
most current version of the page, and the designer just dropped it in where told to
do so. She didn't realize that the text described specifically the earlier version.
Luckily, the spirit of the example remains intact even though the page supplied does
not match the text.
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Updates to TNLGT Stock Market Investing, 2004 Edition
All of these changes have been made in the 2008 edition of The Neatest Little Guide to Stock Market Investing,
which I recommend getting. I'm keeping the list of changes here for those who still have
a copy of the 2004 edition:
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The New Dow
On April 8, 2004, Dow Jones & Company changed three companies listed on
the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The three removed were Eastman Kodak (EK),
AT&T (T), and International Paper (IP). The three added were
American International Group (AIG), Pfizer (PFE), and Verizon Communications (VZ).
This impacts the Dow list and some examples in Chapter 7 "Doubling The Dow".
However, it does not affect the strategies discussed in any way.
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Worth Magazine Is Now Worthless
On page 133, I began my review of Worth with the simple words,
"I love Worth." I went on to write that its columnists are second
to none and include Peter Lynch. I mentioned the excellent global investing
section, the feature showing what stocks successful fund managers are buying
along with their reasons, the section picking the brains of top newsletter editors,
and the fact that the magazine utilizes unpopular measurements such as
price-to-sales and quality of earnings. To my great disappointment, the magazine was
purchased by CurtCo Publishing and is now published under the auspices of
the Robb Report. You may recognize that name. Robb Report is
the magazine for the already-wealthy to read as they manage their wealth.
Out with investing; in with philanthropy. Sayonara stocks; hello three-generation
family stewardship legacies. Exit Peter Lynch on undervalued stocks; enter
former President Bill Clinton on charitable causes. There is nothing left
for investors. You can see the current irrelevance here. I will remove my
recommendation.
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Typos in TNLGT Stock Market Investing, 2004 Edition
There are six known typos in the first printing
of The Neatest Little Guide to Stock Market Investing,
2004 Edition. They will be fixed in the second printing. Plume
and I apologize for any confusion. If you find another typo, please use
the button below the list to report it to me. Here they are:
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Page 5, Paragraph 1, Sentence 3
Reads, "Sell it later for $90 and your return is 2 percent." Should
read, "Sell it later for $90 and your return is 200 percent."
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Page 37, Paragraph 4, Sentence 3
Reads, "It's the most common measure of a whether a stock is a good deal."
Delete the "a" before "whether".
Should read, "It's the most common measure of whether a stock is a good deal."
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Page 66, Paragraph 1, Sentences 5 and 6
Reads, "Lynch offers several examples, two of which I show here. One
is for Coca-Cola, a stalwart company." Should read, "Lynch offers
several examples, one of which I
show here. It's for Coca-Cola, a
stalwart company." Also, the following paragraph (beginning "Coca-Cola
is selling at...") is an excerpt from Lynch's book and should be
formatted as such.
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Page 108, Table
The ticker symbol for Hewlett-Packard is shown as HWP. It should be
HPQ.
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Page 113, Table
The company name in row 2 reads, "General Motors".
It should read, "General Electric".
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Page 208, Paragraph 1
The paragraph beginning, "In general, a P/E ratio that's..." is part
of the Peter Lynch quote above it, and should be formatted as such.
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