Beardstown Ladies Wiki resources & Beardstown Ladies information at HealthHaven.com
advertise
toolbar
services
publishers
database
membership
Dr. Paul

Search  for    ?
web dir image video media news gallery wiki shop 
about
HealthBot
stats
live show
health store
shirts
JOIN/LOGIN
Beardstown Ladies:

The Beardstown Ladies were a group of older women who formed an investment club, formally known as the Beardstown Business and Professional Women's Investment Club, in Beardstown, Illinois, USA.[1]

Founded in 1983, the group achieved fame for their stock market acumen, claiming investment returns of more than 23.4% per year from their inception through 1994. They received considerable attention in national media outlets, and authored a best-selling book, The Beardstown Ladies' Common-Sense Investment Guide, following it up with four more books.[1]

In 1995, personal finance counselor and best-selling author (Personal Finance for Dummies, Investing for Dummies) Eric Tyson wrote an article in the San Francisco Chronicle exposing the fact that this club did not have any documentation or audit to back up their claimed investment returns.

In 1998, an article in Chicago magazine asserted that the group's stated returns had included the new investments made by its members, and that when computed in conventional fashion, their annual rate of return for 1984–1993 was actually 9.1%. This was considerably worse than the 14.9% return on the S&P 500 during the same period.[1] Outside auditor Price Waterhouse, hired by the club, confirmed the sub-par 9.1% annual rate for 1984–1993. The auditor also discovered the Beardstown Ladies' annualized return was 15.3% when all of 1983–1997 was included; this was better than the average stock fund at the time, but still worse than the S&P 500 return of 17.2% for the same period.[2]

This revelation led to a class action lawsuit against their publisher (Hyperion, a division of Disney), which settled the case by offering to swap the books for other Hyperion books.[1]

As of 2006, the club still exists and is still investing.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e Gongloff, Mark (2006-05-01). ""Where Are They Now: The Beardstown Ladies"". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved on 2007-09-09.
  2. ^ Kadlec, Daniel (1998-03-30). ""Jail the Beardstown Ladies!"". [[Time (magazine)|]]. Retrieved on 2007-09-09.

[edit] External links


Product Results:

Lady Mac Steed Prune Tartan by Lady Mac Steed Eau De Toilette Spray 3.3 oz
Lady Mac Steed Prune Tartan by Lady Mac Steed...
Lady Mac Steed Blue Tartan by Lady Mac Steed Eau De Toilette Spray 3.4 oz
Lady Mac Steed Blue Tartan by Lady Mac Steed...
Lady Mac Steed Prune Tartan by Lady Mac Steed Eau De Toilette Spray 3.3 oz
Lady Mac Steed Prune Tartan by Lady Mac Steed...
Lady Mac Steed Blue Tartan by Lady Mac Steed Eau De Toilette Spray 3.4 oz
Lady Mac Steed Blue Tartan by Lady Mac Steed...
Eau De Toilette Spray 3.3 oz Women
Lady Mac Steed Rose Tartan by Lady Mac Steed

Search  for    ?
web dir image video media news gallery wiki shop 


↑ top of page ↑