• zerolihzerolih
      ·01-21
      ​"Employ your time in improving yourself by other men’s writings, so that you shall gain easily what others have labored hard for." — Socrates I'm planning to read up classic books written by famous authors from different fields such as Dale Carnegie, Peter Lynch,  Benjamin Graham etc
      95Comment
      Report
    • LiverpoolRedLiverpoolRed
      ·01-20
      I am still in the progress of reading “Tiger Brokers Options Handbook”. I plan to complete in 2026. This is best book for beginners to pro traders for options trader. Most of the times that I am trading on options for selling call or put option. This book will cover a lot of other option strategies. I will target to complete the whole book in 2  months time.
      442Comment
      Report
    • AqaAqa
      ·01-16
      Replying to @j islandfund:Definitely!👍🏻//@j islandfund:a gripping read good choice ⭐🐯//@Aqa:[Happy] “Tiger Brokers Options Handbook” is the ‘must read’ for 2026. I would like to get a copy of it. This is best book for beginners to pro traders. It is TigerAI Smart integration that helps us form strategy with risk control and analyze the macro investment environment. Thanks @TigerEvents @icycrystal @1PC
      1871
      Report
    • GoodLife99GoodLife99
      ·01-11
      Replying to @koolgal:thanks for sharing, feel like wanting to buy the book too.//@koolgal:🌟🌟🌟I am halfway reading through Think and Grow Rich & something unexpected is happening - I am not just reading a book, I am watching my mindset shift in real time.  Every chapter feels like a mirror, forcing me to confront my beliefs, habits &  doubts that shape my investing decisions far more than market news ever could. 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 t
      6531
      Report
    • ShyonShyon
      ·01-11
      My 2026 reading goal is 12 books for the year, roughly one per month, with a daily habit of 20–30 minutes of focused reading. I’m reading for retention and application, not speed—one well-applied idea compounds more than finishing many books quickly. 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 favo
      7804
      Report
    • Emotional InvestorEmotional Investor
      ·01-11
      As you travel along you investment path, there is one book that is absolutely Epic. arguably the holly grail of investment books. It's not the first book you should read. it was first publishes in 1943, and its 725 pages of pure hell. It's dry, it goes into minute detail but it's about understanding value. A much easier read would be "the intelligent investor" by Ben graham. I'd read that first. it teaches you the what but not the how.  "Securities analysis" by Ben graham and David Dodd Is the book I speak of. It teaches you the how. The discipline it must have taken to write is insane. But the discipline it will take you to read it... crazy. If you know nothing about interpreting financial statements, you will know everything.  Yes it was written in 1943, irrelevant? Certai
      624Comment
      Report
    • JackosenJackosen
      ·01-11
      Need to finish reading Tiger broker free option book and learn to apply the knowledge.
      317Comment
      Report
    • Am3n_TaoAm3n_Tao
      ·01-11
      Book of 5 Rings. Learn to master strategy, have a clear mindset and instil discipline. Apply it to your equities investment and trading fluidity like flowing water. There is no need for skill in trading. Just be water.
      729Comment
      Report
    • koolgalkoolgal
      ·01-11
      🌟🌟🌟I am halfway reading through Think and Grow Rich & something unexpected is happening - I am not just reading a book, I am watching my mindset shift in real time.  Every chapter feels like a mirror, forcing me to confront my beliefs, habits &  doubts that shape my investing decisions far more than market news ever could. 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 strengthen
      1.61K13
      Report
    • THBTHB
      ·01-11
      Go go go 2026
      319Comment
      Report
    • 我要睡觉了 再见我要睡觉了 再见
      ·01-11
      Cool go 2026
      427Comment
      Report
    • all the bestall the best
      ·01-11
      Coool 20222667
      473Comment
      Report
    • alex alexalexalex alexalex
      ·01-11
      Cool 2026
      288Comment
      Report
    • AMDidassAMDidass
      ·01-11
      Sure win year
      261Comment
      Report
    • j islandfundj islandfund
      ·01-11
      Replying to @Aqa:a gripping read good choice ⭐🐯//@Aqa:[Happy] “Tiger Brokers Options Handbook” is the ‘must read’ for 2026. I would like to get a copy of it. This is best book for beginners to pro traders. It is TigerAI Smart integration that helps us form strategy with risk control and analyze the macro investment environment. Thanks @TigerEvents @icycrystal @1PC
      529Comment
      Report
    • LazyCat InvestsLazyCat Invests
      ·01-10
      My reading plan: 1. Making your millions in REITs: the savy investor's guide for crazy times by Gabriel Yap. - This is to further my knowledge of how to assess and invest in REITs. 2. Huat Ah! : building wealth in Singapore with unit trusts by Derek Gue - reading to know the basics of units trusts and how to invest in them.
      383Comment
      Report
    • Fast_tradeFast_trade
      ·01-10
      I wish that someone could generate 2 book / magazine per month that talk about current trends and technology ( now 2026 is AI ) in 1980 is PC magazine. 2030 quantum computing . 2040 bio-robotics.. and beyond
      321Comment
      Report
    • MojoStellarMojoStellar
      ·01-10
      6. Key Learning Themes Across Great Investors • Risk comes from ignorance, not volatility • Long-term thinking is a competitive advantage • Simplicity beats complexity • Temperament > IQ • Patience is underrated but powerful 7. A Thoughtful Reading Plan (How to Read) • Read slowly, not passively • Take notes on ideas, not facts • Re-read key chapters • Apply concepts to real investments • Reflect more than you consume A great book read twice is better than ten read once. Closing Thought Markets reward patience. Books build patience. May we all invest not just in assets—but in wisdom, clarity, and long-term abundance. 📖 May everyone have abundance of wealth—and the temperament to keep it. @TigerEvents thank you for this event.
      6842
      Report
    • MojoStellarMojoStellar
      ·01-10
      📓 One Up on Wall Street — Peter Lynch Takeaways: • Invest in what you understand • Growth stories require patience • Simple insights can beat institutions Quote: “The real key to making money in stocks is not to get scared out of them.” 📔 The Psychology of Money — Morgan Housel Takeaways: • Behavior matters more than intelligence • Time is the greatest investing advantage • Wealth is about freedom, not appearance Quote: “Doing well with money has little to do with how smart you are and a lot to do with how you behave.” 5. Core Investment Pain Points Every Investor Faces • Emotional reactions to volatility • Overtrading and impatience • Following narratives instead of fundamentals • Fear during drawdowns • Greed during bull markets Books help build strategic distance from these traps. part
      350Comment
      Report
    • MojoStellarMojoStellar
      ·01-10
      📕 Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits — Philip Fisher Takeaways: • Quality businesses outperform over long periods • Deep research matters more than diversification • Management integrity is a competitive advantage Quote: “The stock market is filled with individuals who know the price of everything, but the value of nothing.” 📗 The Little Book That Still Beats the Market — Joel Greenblatt Takeaways: • Simple frameworks can outperform complex ones • Valuation + quality is a powerful combination • Consistency matters more than brilliance Quote: “Good investing is not about avoiding volatility—it’s about understanding value.” 📙 Poor Charlie’s Almanack — Charlie Munger Takeaways: • Mental models improve decision accuracy • Avoid stupidity before seeking brilliance • Multidisciplinary think
      536Comment
      Report
    • zerolihzerolih
      ·01-21
      ​"Employ your time in improving yourself by other men’s writings, so that you shall gain easily what others have labored hard for." — Socrates I'm planning to read up classic books written by famous authors from different fields such as Dale Carnegie, Peter Lynch,  Benjamin Graham etc
      95Comment
      Report
    • LiverpoolRedLiverpoolRed
      ·01-20
      I am still in the progress of reading “Tiger Brokers Options Handbook”. I plan to complete in 2026. This is best book for beginners to pro traders for options trader. Most of the times that I am trading on options for selling call or put option. This book will cover a lot of other option strategies. I will target to complete the whole book in 2  months time.
      442Comment
      Report
    • koolgalkoolgal
      ·01-10
      My 2026 Investing Reading List: 12 Books To Rewire My Money Mindset  🌟🌟🌟2026 is my year of intentional growth - not through chasing the next hot stock but through reshaping the way I think, feel and behave with money.  These 12 books are not just titles on a list.  They are teachers, mirrors and tools.  Each one solves a different part of the emotional puzzle that investing demands. The Core Five 1.  Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill This is a foundational mindset book.  Napoleon Hill teaches that wealth begins with a clarity of purpose, belief and disciplined thought.  I am reading this to rebuild my inner architecture, to think like someone who deserves long term wealth, not someone who reacts to every market wobble. 2.  The Algebra of Wealth by
      9235
      Report
    • TigerEventsTigerEvents
      ·01-10

      [Event] Share Your 2026 Reading Plan 📚

      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 participateCreate a post under this topic: Share Your 2026 Reading PlanInclude at least one of the following:Your 2026 reading goal (e.g., 12 books / 30 minut
      9.85K67
      Report
      [Event] Share Your 2026 Reading Plan 📚
    • MojoStellarMojoStellar
      ·01-10
      📚 2026 Reading Plan for Investors: Compounding Knowledge Before Compounding Capital A good investment book doesn’t just help for a year. It upgrades your decision-making system for decades. Consistent reading - 30 minutes a day—can quietly shift your entire investing curve. Not through predictions, but through better judgment, emotional control, and clearer thinking when markets are loud and confusing. This is my 2026 reading intention, shared with the investment community for reflection and discussion. 1. Why Reading Is a Long-Term Investment Edge Markets change. Human behavior doesn’t. The best investment books: • Improve how you think, not what to buy • Teach patience, probability, and humility • Reduce costly emotional mistakes Reading compounds invisibly—much like great investing itse
      372Comment
      Report
    • Emotional InvestorEmotional Investor
      ·01-11
      As you travel along you investment path, there is one book that is absolutely Epic. arguably the holly grail of investment books. It's not the first book you should read. it was first publishes in 1943, and its 725 pages of pure hell. It's dry, it goes into minute detail but it's about understanding value. A much easier read would be "the intelligent investor" by Ben graham. I'd read that first. it teaches you the what but not the how.  "Securities analysis" by Ben graham and David Dodd Is the book I speak of. It teaches you the how. The discipline it must have taken to write is insane. But the discipline it will take you to read it... crazy. If you know nothing about interpreting financial statements, you will know everything.  Yes it was written in 1943, irrelevant? Certai
      624Comment
      Report
    • GoodLife99GoodLife99
      ·01-11
      Replying to @koolgal:thanks for sharing, feel like wanting to buy the book too.//@koolgal:🌟🌟🌟I am halfway reading through Think and Grow Rich & something unexpected is happening - I am not just reading a book, I am watching my mindset shift in real time.  Every chapter feels like a mirror, forcing me to confront my beliefs, habits &  doubts that shape my investing decisions far more than market news ever could. 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 t
      6531
      Report
    • koolgalkoolgal
      ·01-11
      🌟🌟🌟I am halfway reading through Think and Grow Rich & something unexpected is happening - I am not just reading a book, I am watching my mindset shift in real time.  Every chapter feels like a mirror, forcing me to confront my beliefs, habits &  doubts that shape my investing decisions far more than market news ever could. 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 strengthen
      1.61K13
      Report
    • ShyonShyon
      ·01-11
      My 2026 reading goal is 12 books for the year, roughly one per month, with a daily habit of 20–30 minutes of focused reading. I’m reading for retention and application, not speed—one well-applied idea compounds more than finishing many books quickly. 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 favo
      7804
      Report
    • AqaAqa
      ·01-16
      Replying to @j islandfund:Definitely!👍🏻//@j islandfund:a gripping read good choice ⭐🐯//@Aqa:[Happy] “Tiger Brokers Options Handbook” is the ‘must read’ for 2026. I would like to get a copy of it. This is best book for beginners to pro traders. It is TigerAI Smart integration that helps us form strategy with risk control and analyze the macro investment environment. Thanks @TigerEvents @icycrystal @1PC
      1871
      Report
    • MojoStellarMojoStellar
      ·01-10
      6. Key Learning Themes Across Great Investors • Risk comes from ignorance, not volatility • Long-term thinking is a competitive advantage • Simplicity beats complexity • Temperament > IQ • Patience is underrated but powerful 7. A Thoughtful Reading Plan (How to Read) • Read slowly, not passively • Take notes on ideas, not facts • Re-read key chapters • Apply concepts to real investments • Reflect more than you consume A great book read twice is better than ten read once. Closing Thought Markets reward patience. Books build patience. May we all invest not just in assets—but in wisdom, clarity, and long-term abundance. 📖 May everyone have abundance of wealth—and the temperament to keep it. @TigerEvents thank you for this event.
      6842
      Report
    • swimintheairswimintheair
      ·01-10
      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 wel
      577Comment
      Report
    • fishballmeifishballmei
      ·01-10
      My 2026 Booklist Here's what I'm planning to read and why: "The Psychology of Money" by Morgan Housel — Understanding the behavioral side of investing and why smart people make poor financial decisions "A Random Walk Down Wall Street" by Burton Malkiel — Getting perspective on market efficiency and different investing approaches "The Intelligent Investor" by Benjamin Graham — Building a foundation in value investing principles and margin of safety If I could only recommend one book for 2026: It would be "The Psychology of Money" — it's accessible, practical, and 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 already hit home: "Doing well with money has little to do wit
      204Comment
      Report
    • fishballmeifishballmei
      ·01-10
      My 2026 Booklist Here's what I'm planning to read and why: "The Psychology of Money" by Morgan Housel — Understanding the behavioral side of investing and why smart people make poor financial decisions "A Random Walk Down Wall Street" by Burton Malkiel — Getting perspective on market efficiency and different investing approaches "The Intelligent Investor" by Benjamin Graham — Building a foundation in value investing principles and margin of safety If I could only recommend one book for 2026: It would be "The Psychology of Money" — it's accessible, practical, and 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 already hit home: "Doing well with money has little to do wit
      358Comment
      Report
    • MojoStellarMojoStellar
      ·01-10
      📚 2026 Reading Plan for Investors: Compounding Knowledge Before Compounding Capital A good investment book doesn’t just help for a year. It upgrades your decision-making system for decades. Consistent reading - 30 minutes a day—can quietly shift your entire investing curve. Not through predictions, but through better judgment, emotional control, and clearer thinking when markets are loud and confusing. This is my 2026 reading intention, shared with the investment community for reflection and discussion. 1. Why Reading Is a Long-Term Investment Edge Markets change. Human behavior doesn’t. The best investment books: • Improve how you think, not what to buy • Teach patience, probability, and humility • Reduce costly emotional mistakes Reading compounds invisibly—much like great investing itse
      345Comment
      Report
    • MojoStellarMojoStellar
      ·01-10
      📕 Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits — Philip Fisher Takeaways: • Quality businesses outperform over long periods • Deep research matters more than diversification • Management integrity is a competitive advantage Quote: “The stock market is filled with individuals who know the price of everything, but the value of nothing.” 📗 The Little Book That Still Beats the Market — Joel Greenblatt Takeaways: • Simple frameworks can outperform complex ones • Valuation + quality is a powerful combination • Consistency matters more than brilliance Quote: “Good investing is not about avoiding volatility—it’s about understanding value.” 📙 Poor Charlie’s Almanack — Charlie Munger Takeaways: • Mental models improve decision accuracy • Avoid stupidity before seeking brilliance • Multidisciplinary think
      536Comment
      Report
    • MojoStellarMojoStellar
      ·01-10
      2. Investing Framework: Staying Calm in a Noisy Market A strong framework helps investors: • Ignore short-term noise • Separate price from value • Act rationally when others panic or chase Books written by great investors are essentially borrowed experience—learning their hard lessons without paying the tuition fee of losses. 3. My 2026 Reading Goal • 6 books total • 30 minutes per day • 1 book every 2 months • Focus: timeless investing principles, psychology, and strategy The goal is not speed—it’s absorption and application. 4. Must-Read Investment Books & Key Takeaways 📘 The Intelligent Investor — Benjamin Graham Takeaways: • Margin of safety is the core of risk management • Market is there to serve you, not guide you • Discipline beats intelligence over time Quote: “The investor’s
      612Comment
      Report
    • MrzorroMrzorro
      ·01-10
      My 2026 reading goal will be 4 books per month, 1 book per week ( maybe a cookbook, novel, investment books, etc) One of the books I am reading now, and would I like to recommend for 2026 is Reminiscences of a Stock Operator. Absolutely the best book on stock market trading ever written. Although the book is a memoir of stock trading in the early years of the 20th century, it addresses the basic psychology and principles of trading that are directly applicable to 21st-century stock trading. Get it, read it once or twice and you really need little else to learn effective and profitable trading. A most helpful addition would be a basic 21-day, 50-day, 200-day moving price average and fundamentals system such as the basic Investor's Business Daily system.
      468Comment
      Report
    • MojoStellarMojoStellar
      ·01-10
      📓 One Up on Wall Street — Peter Lynch Takeaways: • Invest in what you understand • Growth stories require patience • Simple insights can beat institutions Quote: “The real key to making money in stocks is not to get scared out of them.” 📔 The Psychology of Money — Morgan Housel Takeaways: • Behavior matters more than intelligence • Time is the greatest investing advantage • Wealth is about freedom, not appearance Quote: “Doing well with money has little to do with how smart you are and a lot to do with how you behave.” 5. Core Investment Pain Points Every Investor Faces • Emotional reactions to volatility • Overtrading and impatience • Following narratives instead of fundamentals • Fear during drawdowns • Greed during bull markets Books help build strategic distance from these traps. part
      350Comment
      Report
    • j islandfundj islandfund
      ·01-11
      Replying to @Aqa:a gripping read good choice ⭐🐯//@Aqa:[Happy] “Tiger Brokers Options Handbook” is the ‘must read’ for 2026. I would like to get a copy of it. This is best book for beginners to pro traders. It is TigerAI Smart integration that helps us form strategy with risk control and analyze the macro investment environment. Thanks @TigerEvents @icycrystal @1PC
      529Comment
      Report