New year, new habits—and yes, this one can actually compound.
In investing, we talk about compounding returns all the time. But the most underrated compounding is knowledge: one good book can upgrade your decision-making for years, and a consistent reading habit can quietly change your entire investing curve.
So here’s the question: What are you reading in 2026—and why?
We’re inviting you to share your 2026 Reading Plan with the community. Whether you’re building an investing framework, leveling up options skills, learning macro, or just reading to stay calm in a noisy market—post it and let others steal your list (in a good way).
How to participate
Create a post under this topic: Share Your 2026 Reading Plan
Include at least one of the following:
Your 2026 reading goal (e.g., 12 books / 30 minutes a day / one book per month)
Your booklist (titles + what you want to learn from each)
The investing problem you’re trying to solve (discipline? risk control? macro? strategy?)
A short takeaway from a book you’ve already started
Suggested prompts
If you could only recommend one investing book for 2026, what would it be?
What’s the biggest investing habit you want to fix this year—and what will you read to help?
Rewards
Every valid entry: 5 Tiger Coins 🐯
We’ll randomly pick 1 participants to win 100 Tiger coins
The most thoughtful reading plan may get a featured spot in the community (and a surprise bonus 😉)
Event time
From Jan 9, 2026 to Jan 31, 2026 (SGT)
Comments
Napoleon Hill wrote the book nearly a century ago, yet it is almost unsettling how relevant it still is. In a world of AI driven markets, ETFs, crypto & endless financial commentaries, his message remains simple & timeless:
Wealth begins in the mind long before it appears in the portfolio.
As I read it I am realising that the biggest breakthroughs in my investing journey is never about finding the perfect stock. They were about strengthening my inner self that supports conviction, discipline & patience.
This book helps me to become the kind of person who can build wealth with clarity, purpose and inner strength.
@TigerEvents @TigerStars @Tiger_comments
If you could only recommend one investing book for 2026, what would it be?
What’s the biggest investing habit you want to fix this year—and what will you read to help?
Rewards
Every valid entry: 5 Tiger Coins 🐯
We’ll randomly pick 1 participants to win 100 Tiger coins
My reading list focuses on decision-making, risk control, and staying rational in volatile markets. Key titles include The Most Important Thing by Howard Marks for cycle and risk awareness, Thinking in Bets by Annie Duke for probabilistic thinking in options and trading, and Expected Returns by Antti Ilmanen to strengthen my long-term allocation and macro framework.
The biggest habit I want to fix in 2026 is overreacting to short-term market noise. My main takeaway so far is that good investing is about positioning sensibly when odds are favorable and surviving when they’re not. If I could recommend one investing book for 2026, it would be The Most Important Thing—it builds a mindset that compounds over time.
@TigerEvents @TigerStars
My 2026 Booklist
"The Psychology of Money" by Morgan Housel — Understanding behavioral finance and why emotions drive poor decisions
"The Intelligent Investor" by Benjamin Graham — Building a foundation in value investing and margin of safety
"Thinking, Fast and Slow" by Daniel Kahneman — Learning how cognitive biases affect decision-making
"Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits" by Philip Fisher — Understanding quality investing and business evaluation
"Market Wizards" by Jack Schwager — Learning from diverse successful investors
If I could only recommend one book for 2026: "The Psychology of Money" — it addresses the real reason most of us struggle: our own behavior, not lack of market knowledge.
Early Takeaway
I've just started "The Psychology of Money" and one insight hit home: "Doing well with money has little to do with how smart you are and a lot to do with how you behave." I don't need to be the smartest analyst—I need to control my emotions and stay consistent.
of
The Intelligent Investor
by Benjamin Graham. Released with new, modern commentaries by financial journalist Jason Zweig, this edition bridges Graham's timeless value investing principles with today's volatile, trend-heavy markets.
The biggest investing "bug" to patch this year is impulsivity—letting market "mood swings" dictate my strategy.