Joel Greenblatt: 17 Books That Every Investor Should Read
The Acquirer's Multiple2021-05-14T03:45:44-04:00
We recently started a series called – Superinvestors: Books That Every Investor Should Read. So far we’ve provided book recommendations from:
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Q2 hedge fund letters, conference, scoops etc

Together with our own recommended reading list of:
This week we’re going to take a look at recommended books from superinvestor Joel Greenblatt. Taken from his writings, interviews, lectures, and shareholder letters over the years. Here’s his list:
- The Intelligent Investor (Benjamin Graham)
- Margin of Safety: Risk-Averse Value Investing Strategies for the Thoughtful Investor (Seth Klarman)
- One Up On Wall Street: How To Use What You Already Know To Make Money In The Market (Peter Lynch)
- The Only Investment Guide You’ll Ever Need (Andrew Tobias)
- Money Masters of Our Time (John Train)
- Value Investing: From Graham to Buffett and Beyond (Greenwald, Kahn, Sonkin, Van Biema)
- Beating The Street (Peter Lynch)
- The New Finance: Overreaction, Complexity, and Their Consequences (Robert Haugen)
- What Works on Wall Street (James O’Shaughnessy)
- The Essays of Warren Buffett, 4th Edition: Lessons for Investors and Managers (Lawrence Cunningham)
- The Warren Buffett Way, Third Edition (Robert Hagstrom)
- You Can Be a Stock Market Genius (Joel Greenblatt)
- Contrarian Investment Strategies: The Classic Edition (David Dreman)
- The Little Book That Beats the Market (Joel Greenblatt)
- Security Analysis on Wall Street: A Comprehensive Guide to Today’s Valuation Methods (Jeffrey Hooke)
- The New Contrarian Investment Strategy (David Dreman)
- The Big Secret for the Small Investor: A New Route to Long-Term Investment Success (Joel Greenblatt)
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The Acquirer's Multiple
The Acquirer’s Multiple® is the valuation ratio used to find attractive takeover candidates.
It examines several financial statement items that other multiples like the price-to-earnings ratio do not, including debt, preferred stock, and minority interests; and interest, tax, depreciation, amortization.
The Acquirer’s Multiple® is calculated as follows:
Enterprise Value / Operating Earnings*
It is based on the investment strategy described in the book Deep Value: Why Activist Investors and Other Contrarians Battle for Control of Losing Corporations, written by Tobias Carlisle, founder of acquirersmultiple.com.
The Acquirer’s Multiple® differs from The Magic Formula® Earnings Yield because The Acquirer’s Multiple® uses operating earnings in place of EBIT.
Operating earnings is constructed from the top of the income statement down, where EBIT is constructed from the bottom up. Calculating operating earnings from the top down standardizes the metric, making a comparison across companies, industries and sectors possible, and, by excluding special items–earnings that a company does not expect to recur in future years–ensures that these earnings are related only to operations.
Similarly, The Acquirer’s Multiple® differs from the ordinary enterprise multiple because it uses operating earnings in place of EBITDA, which is also constructed from the bottom up.
Tobias Carlisle is also the Chief Investment Officer of Carbon Beach Asset Management LLC.
He's best known as the author of the well regarded Deep Value website Greenbackd, the book Deep Value: Why Activists Investors and Other Contrarians Battle for Control of Losing Corporations (2014, Wiley Finance), and Quantitative Value: A Practitioner’s Guide to Automating Intelligent Investment and Eliminating Behavioral Errors (2012, Wiley Finance). He has extensive experience in investment management, business valuation, public company corporate governance, and corporate law.
Articles written for Seeking Alpha are provided by the team of analysts at acquirersmultiple.com, home of The Acquirer's Multiple Deep Value Stock Screener.
All metrics use trailing twelve month or most recent quarter data.
* The screener uses the CRSP/Compustat merged database “OIADP” line item defined as “Operating Income After Depreciation.”
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