• Briefing
  • News & Politics
  • Arts
  • Life
  • Business & Tech
  • Science
  • Podcasts & Video
  • Blogs
SIDEBAR

Return to Article

Slate Contents

When Graham and Dodd wrote Security Analysis in 1934, the lack of an Internet was the least of an analyst's worries. There were no spreadsheets, computers, or information databases. There weren't even any calculators. There were no company conference calls or quarterly earnings releases. There were few filing requirements, lax accounting rules, and little legal enforcement. There were only a handful of mutual funds, no hedge funds, and no computerized trading. There was no CNBC, no market radio, no Bloomberg, no Yahoo! Finance, no real-time quotes. There were paper tickers, for God's sake.

site map | build your own Slate | the fray | about us | contact us | Slate on Facebook | search
feedback | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile | make Slate your homepage
© Copyright 2009 Washington Post.Newsweek Interactive Co. LLC
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved