Last, I would suggest you can also just ask any of the available LLM’s out there now to explain the term you are interested in and get a pretty good initial explanation.
As for books, I have three. How good they are is subjective as one textbook is from years ago but they should cover most of the investment markets side of things:
Options as a Strategic Investment (Lawrence McMIllan)
Technical Analysis (Kirkpatrick & Dahlquist)
Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management (Frank Reilly) -- the old textbook I kept around.
If your interest in more in the economic terms and theory area you might look for The MIT Dictionary of Modern Economics or a similar dictionary of economic terms.
You might find this link helpful for your questions.
This is a link to the glossory from the above site.
This is from the FRB of St. Louis.
Last, I would suggest you can also just ask any of the available LLM’s out there now to explain the term you are interested in and get a pretty good initial explanation.
As for books, I have three. How good they are is subjective as one textbook is from years ago but they should cover most of the investment markets side of things:
Options as a Strategic Investment (Lawrence McMIllan)
Technical Analysis (Kirkpatrick & Dahlquist)
Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management (Frank Reilly) -- the old textbook I kept around.
If your interest in more in the economic terms and theory area you might look for The MIT Dictionary of Modern Economics or a similar dictionary of economic terms.
Thanks! I know about Investopedia & often use GPT-4 for this kind of thing, but I prefer books because I can also read them offline.