Best education funding books according to redditors

We found 23 Reddit comments discussing the best education funding books. We ranked the 10 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Education Funding:

u/setthetrap · 38 pointsr/finance

You need this right here-- http://www.amazon.com/So-you-FLUNKED-Series-exam/dp/1489526196

totally worth it because you will ace every option question, allowing you to focus on other things like munis and shit. I wouldn't have passed mine if it weren't for this book. follow the recipe inside. Plus the author is real cool and is reachable on Facebook.

u/mikefromtheblock · 6 pointsr/FinancialCareers

I think you should try to bang them out in relatively quick succession but I've only done SIE and 65 (and 3), so I can't confidently speak for the others. The SIE is needed before the 6 and 7 top offs. You could take the SIE, 63, 65, 66 when you are ready and don't need sponsorship, the 6 and 7 both need a firm to sponsor you. Between the SIE and 65, the 65 was potentially harder because it was harder but they seemed pretty similar. I actually studied SIE material to prep for the 65 plus some other material. All the material you need is out on the internet for free in some capacity if you dig deep enough. You'll probably want to do the SIE first because it's required for two others, is cheapest, and is good practice for the 65 (possibly others). What worked for me (on SIE then 65) was to read the book linked, practice, watch related YouTube videos, practice, sit for test. If you pass, your result is "Pass" so no brownie points for getting 100%.

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This was super helpful: https://www.investopedia.com/quizzer/

Same with this - there are practice exams in the book as well: https://smile.amazon.com/Pass-SIE-Explanation-Securities-Essentials-ebook/dp/B0796JZ31L/ref=smi_www_rco2_go_smi_g5171374337?_encoding=UTF8&%2AVersion%2A=1&%2Aentries%2A=0&ie=UTF8

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Good luck!

u/shar_blue · 3 pointsr/PersonalFinanceCanada

Check out the books How Not to Move Back in With Your Parents: The Young Person's Complete Guide to Financial Empowerment and More Money for Beer and Textbooks for Canadian books aimed at teenagers.

Wealthy Barber Returns is also a solid “basics” book.

u/senith1 · 3 pointsr/LeveragedBuyout

Wow, that's fantastic. Not what most 19 yos are doing. My only advice will be to really understand the business well with a focus on cash flow and debt repayment capacity. I put up a simple book for my students on modeling LBOs https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07412Y1N9/ . You might find it helpful.

Good luck!

u/i357 · 3 pointsr/HuntsvilleAlabama

There's also a book called "the wealthy child" by a local community leader that teaches kids about financial literacy and personal management

https://www.amazon.com/Wealthy-Child-Delvin-Sullivan-ebook/dp/B076HZ23C2

u/bobwilly13 · 2 pointsr/pennystocks

You should never follow anyone's advice on what stock to pick. Don't look for hot stock picks either. Even if you find a good one that someone recommends, it doesn't guarantee your success with it. I personally find assessing the stock's daily volume to be the most important factor in making my selections. I want something popular. Though this still doesn't tell you where to buy in at or where to sell at.

I have just released a new cheap Ebook teaching beginners with tiny account sizes how to search for and trade ONLY the best penny stock plays based on a defined search criteria. It's simplistic enough for newbies to understand and straight to the point. If you're interested you can click below to check it out. If not then that's cool too. I'm always here to answer any newbie related questions free of charge. Just shoot me a message anytime.

My Ebook

u/Cheznor · 2 pointsr/Flipping

I haven't read them myself, but a couple of the popular flipping YouTubers have recently released eBooks:

Flip That Sh!t by Bonafide Hustler (also available in eBook format)

101 Killer Clothing Brands by Stephen Raiken (Raiken Profit)

There's also the classic book Arbitrage by Chris Green you may want to check out if you're into retail arbitrage.

u/MichaelLuciusJulian · 1 pointr/options

not OP but I thought about writing a post with more info on each book / recommendations / best summaries.

u/HiIAMCaptainObvious · 1 pointr/BitcoinAll

Here is the post for archival purposes:

Author: Stripezz

Content:

>Found this ebook a couple days ago. Learned a lot about trading. One of the greatest things I probably learned was avoiding trading fees and how bitcoin is actually mined.

>Link: https://www.amazon.com/Cryptocurrency-Trading-Investing-Guide-individuals-ebook/dp/B07CNTM7JX/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1525371290&sr=8-3&keywords=crypto+guide

u/aristotelian74 · 1 pointr/financialindependence

VBTLX. Read a book on bonds if you want to understand the asset class better. I found Swedroe's book to be really helpful.
https://www.amazon.com/Only-Guide-Winning-Strategy-Youll-ebook/dp/B003E74BJM/ref=mt_kindle?_encoding=UTF8&me=

You could look at TIPS (also referred to as "inflation protected securities"), which are a kind of bond with variable rate tied to the inflation rate. However, you are guaranteed zero real return, so generally not recommended for a young investor.

Some people believe in real estate but the sector is already included in VTSAX, so any move you make into real estate or any other sector would be concentration rather than diversification.

Other than that, you are looking at Bitcoin, gold/commodities, or other stuff that is more gambling than investing.

u/Number91ButtonFan · 1 pointr/finance

https://www.amazon.com/So-you-FLUNKED-7-exam/dp/1489526196

(Get this book).

Congrats, and good luck!