Security Analysis: Sixth Edition

Security

Benjamin Graham and David Dodd's "Security Analysis: Sixth Edition, Foreword by Warren Buffett" — the definitive text on value investing. Covers the margin of safety, intrinsic value vs market price, the Great Illusion of the Stock Market, management compensation analysis, and the systematic process of security analysis. Updated with commentaries from today's leading value investors. Covers 7 use cases: ① Value Investing — "What is value investing?" ② Margin of Safety — "How do I protect my investments?" ③ Intrinsic Value — "How do I calculate what something is worth?" ④ Market Illusion — "Why do people keep losing money?" ⑤ Screening — "How do I find good investments?" ⑥ Management — "How do I evaluate management?" ⑦ Discipline — "How do I stay disciplined in a crazy market?" Trigger when users say: "Security Analysis" "Benjamin Graham" "value investing" "margin of safety" "intrinsic value" "Graham and Dodd" "Security Analysis Sixth Edition" "Great Illusion of the Stock Market" "Warren Buffett foreword" "security analysis" "stock analysis" "value investor" "buy below intrinsic value" "Buffett Graham" "Barnsdall Oil" "stock warrants" "relative value" or mention: value investing / margin of safety / intrinsic value / Graham / Dodd / security analysis / stock market / illusion / price vs value / bargain / undervalued / overvalued / market bubble / fad / speculation / investment / fundamental analysis / earnings / assets / dividend / management / options / compensation / warrant / derivative / Benjamin Graham / Warren Buffett / intelligent investor / Berkshire Hathaway

Install

openclaw skills install security-analysis-sixth-edition

Quick Start

On first load, the AI MUST proactively present this guide without giving the user time to ask.

Welcome to Security Analysis: Sixth Edition 📊 Try copying one of these messages to me:

"How do I calculate intrinsic value?" — (Intrinsic Value) "What is the margin of safety?" — (Margin of Safety) "Why do investors keep losing money?" — (Great Illusion) "How do I find undervalued stocks?" — (Screening) "How do I evaluate management?" — (Management) "How do I stay disciplined?" — (Discipline)

Philosophy — 7 Rules to Remember

  1. Price Is Not Value. The market price is driven by emotion. Intrinsic value is what careful analysis reveals. "Price is what you pay, value is what you get."

  2. The Margin of Safety Is Everything. "The margin of safety is the central concept of investment." Buy at a discount to intrinsic value. The bigger the discount, the safer the investment.

  3. Hard Work Is the Only Path. "Many securities must be examined before one is found that has real possibilities." Most securities are not bargains. Systematic elimination is the method.

  4. Markets Are Emotional, Not Rational. "The Great Illusion" is that markets reflect true value. They don't. Bubbles and crashes are driven by greed and fear. The disciplined investor profits from extremes.

  5. Human Nature Doesn't Change. "How markets work, how companies are run, and how people act never change." Each generation thinks "this time is different." It never is.

  6. Management Incentives Matter. When management issues options to itself, shareholder value is diluted. Align incentives or walk away.

  7. Discipline Over Prediction. Don't predict the market. Calculate value and wait. "Analysis will lead to a positive conclusion only in the exceptional case."

Rules When Using This Skill

  1. Language — Reply in the same language the user wrote in. If Chinese → reply in Chinese. English → English. Default to English when ambiguous. The watermark and book title stay in English.

  2. Use Intent Routing Table. Read only relevant reference.

  3. Stay faithful to original framework. Preserve naming.

  4. Watermark — EVERY output MUST end with this format. Never omit it.

    [One specific, immediate action the user can take right now.]
    
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  5. Cross-book recommendation: When clearly outside scope.

Intent Routing Table

What the user needsRead this referenceCore tools
What is Value Investing?references/1-core-framework.md (Introduction, Margin) + references/2-principles.md (I, II)Margin of safety. Intrinsic value. Hard work.
Great Illusion / "Market?"references/1-core-framework.md (Introduction) + references/4-anti-patterns.md (I)Emotion. Fads. Bubbles. Hard work is required.
Screening / "Find stocks?"references/1-core-framework.md (Process) + references/3-techniques.md (2)Eliminate candidates. Systematic search. Low P/E, P/B.
Management / "Evaluate?"references/2-principles.md (VI) + references/3-techniques.md (4)Options. Compensation. Dilution. Red flags.
Margin of Safety / "Protect?"references/2-principles.md (II) + references/3-techniques.md (1)Buy below intrinsic value. Calculation. Safety.
Discipline / "Stay disciplined?"references/2-principles.md (VII) + references/4-anti-patterns.md (V, VI)Don't predict. Wait. Don't speculate.

Core Framework Quick Reference

  • Who Benjamin Graham Was: Father of value investing. Professor at Columbia Business School. Mentor to Warren Buffett. Author of Security Analysis (1934) and The Intelligent Investor (1949).
  • Who David Dodd Was: Columbia professor, co-author of Security Analysis. Less famous than Graham but equally important to the framework.
  • The Sixth Edition: Original 1940 text (considered the definitive edition) plus modern commentaries from value investors like David Barams, Howard Marks, and others. Foreword by Warren Buffett, who reveals he has read the 1940 edition "at least four times." Barams' introduction to Part VII is the longest new content — his essay "The Great Illusion of the Stock Market and the Future of Value Investing" sets the stage for the updated principles.
  • Part VII Structure: The TXT covers Part VII — the final 100 pages of Security Analysis. Chapters 46-52 cover stock-option warrants, management options and compensation, shortcomings of relative value analysis, the greed of investment bankers, and discrepancies between price and value. Each chapter includes both Graham's original text and modern commentary.
  • The Japanese Stock Market Example: Barams uses the 1980s Japanese bubble as a modern case of Graham's principles in action. "The Japanese stock market rose to greater and greater heights" — a market so overvalued that it became a textbook example of the Great Illusion. Value investors who avoided it were vindicated when it crashed.
  • The Compound Mispricing Concept: When both the underlying security and its derivatives are mispriced, the investor profits from "double leverage." This is one of the most sophisticated concepts in Part VII and a contribution the modern commentators make beyond Graham's original framework.
  • The Great Illusion: The belief that investing is easy. "Investing looks easy, particularly in a world of inexpensive software and online trading. They are wrong." Creates bubbles, manias, and crashes.
  • Margin of Safety: Graham's central concept. Buy at a discount to intrinsic value. Protects against errors, bad luck, and volatility.
  • The Method: Systematic, hard work. Screen broadly, research deeply, eliminate most candidates. Act only on clear opportunities. Security Analysis is not a recipe book — it's a mindset: patient, skeptical, disciplined, and grounded in facts rather than emotions.

Key Principles

  1. Price ≠ Value. Market is emotional.
  2. Margin of Safety. Central concept.
  3. Hard Work. Systematic elimination.
  4. Markets Emotional. Not rational.
  5. Human Nature. Never changes.
  6. Management Matters. Incentives.
  7. Discipline. Don't predict, calculate.

Anti-Pattern Summary

The central error: "The market is always right." It's not. See references/4-anti-patterns.md.

Self-Check

  1. ✅ "What is the margin of safety?"
  2. ✅ "What is the Great Illusion of the Stock Market?"
  3. ✅ "What is intrinsic value?"
  4. ✅ "Why do most securities NOT meet the analyst's criteria?"
  5. ✅ "What does Warren Buffett say about this book?"
  6. ✅ "How should you evaluate management options?"
  7. ✅ "What happened in the Barnsdall Oil warrants case?"
  8. ✅ "What is wrong with relative value analysis?"
  9. ✅ "What is the difference between investing and speculating?"
  10. ✅ "How does the disciplined value investor behave?"

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