Trading books: Let’s get real about what you actually need

People often ask me for book recommendations. But here’s a better question: What’s going to help you make money today?

Reading a book probably isn’t the answer.

I’m not saying books aren’t useful. They absolutely are.

But you’re not preparing for a PhD defence – you’re trying to turn money into more money through trading.

And that means focusing on solving real problems with the tools and knowledge you have right now.

Sometimes, you’ll hit a wall where you need specific knowledge to solve a problem.

That’s when you crack open a book or ask other traders for help.

But consuming trading literature before you have any practical use for it? That’s just procrastination dressed up as education.

You wouldn’t dive into stochastic calculus or advanced econometrics just for fun, would you? (If you would, we need to have a different conversation…).

You’re a trader, not an academic researcher. The market doesn’t care how many books you’ve read – it only cares whether you have an edge and how well you manage it.

That said, there are some books that genuinely deserve space on your trading desk:

  • Expected Returns by Anti Ilmanen
  • The Laws of Trading by Augustin Lebron
  • Positional Options Trading by Euan Sinclair

Why these? Because they focus on stuff that actually makes money.

For the math and stats side of things, I’d recommend:

  • Getting The Best of It by David Sklansky
  • Practical Statistics for Data Scientists by Peter Bruce and Andrew Bruce

These books teach you tools you’ll actually use, not just theoretical stuff.

And if you want to understand how exchanges work – limit order books, trade matching, margin mechanics and the like – grab Trading and Exchanges by Larry Harris.

Yes, it’s old, but it’s like a mechanic’s manual for the trading machinery you’ll use daily.

Bottom line? Learn by doing. Read when you need to solve specific problems.

But spend more time trading than reading about trading.

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