The Intelligent Investor: Summary & Key Lessons

Warren Buffett calls Benjamin Graham’s The Intelligent Investor “by far the best book on investing ever written,” and he isn’t alone. First published in 1949, it laid the foundation for value investing — the discipline of buying assets for less than they’re worth and ignoring the market’s mood swings.
Graham’s two enduring contributions are “Mr. Market,” the manic-depressive business partner who offers you wildly different prices each day and whom you’re free to ignore, and the “margin of safety,” buying with enough cushion that you’re protected even when you’re wrong. The book is dry and dense, but the principles are bedrock.
Key takeaways:
- Invest based on a business’s underlying value, not the market’s daily emotions.
- Always demand a margin of safety to protect against mistakes and bad luck.
- Temperament, not IQ, is what ultimately makes an investor successful.
Who it’s for: serious long-term investors who want principles over hot tips. Not a beginner’s quick read, but a lifelong reference.
The verdict: the definitive book on value investing, and required reading for anyone who wants to grow wealth in markets without gambling. Pair it with The Snowball to see the philosophy in action.
As an Amazon Associate, Millionaires Books earns from qualifying purchases.