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Milton Berg's Reading List: The Books Behind a 47-Year Career

Ask most market veterans for book recommendations and you get a shelf. Asked in 2026, after 47 years in markets, Milton Berg's list is short, specific — and begins, surprisingly, with the father of value investing.

By the MB Edge Research Desk

William O'Neil

Berg recommends O'Neil's books — best known through How to Make Money in Stocks — for their technical acumen. O'Neil, the founder of Investor's Business Daily, built a discipline around the marriage of price-and-volume behavior with hard performance data, and he appears on Berg's list of formative influences as well as his reading list. For investors raised on buy-and-hold platitudes, O'Neil is often the first encounter with the idea that entries and exits can be studied empirically.

Marty Zweig — Winning on Wall Street

Zweig earns a double mention from Berg: on the influences list and as a named must-read. Winning on Wall Street distills Zweig's evidence-first approach to monetary conditions, momentum, and sentiment. The kinship with Berg's own work is obvious — Zweig tested his rules against history and sized his convictions to the data, not the narrative.

Thomas Bulkowski — Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns

Berg calls Bulkowski's Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns an essential reference guide. It is the least romantic book on the list and that is the point: thousands of measured pattern outcomes, failure rates included. Whatever one thinks of chart patterns as a discipline, Bulkowski's statistical treatment models the right question — not "what does this look like?" but "what actually happened, every time?"

Benjamin Graham — Security Analysis, 1962 edition, pages 24–58

The surprise on a technician's list: Berg calls pages 24–58 of Graham's classic 1962 edition of Security Analysis a must-read. Berg began his career as a strict Graham disciple, and although five decades of research convinced him that no valuation metric reliably times markets, he never abandoned Graham's intellectual standard — evidence over story, discipline over impulse.

That a quantitative technician still sends readers to 35 specific pages of Graham says something about both men: good analysis is good analysis, whatever the school.

The teachers behind the method

Beyond the books, Berg credits a long roster of technicians for shaping his understanding of market behavior: Edson Gould, Richard Arms, Ned Davis, G. Stanley Berge, Robert Prechter, Marty Zweig, Jesse Livermore, William O'Neil, Christopher Carolan, Richard Dennis, James Dines, Jim Alphier, Bob Farrell, Robert Colby, Thomas Meyers, and Thomas Bulkowski among them.

The greatest influence, he says, was Paul Macrae Montgomery — a name worth knowing precisely because it is not famous. Montgomery's openness to every school of technical analysis, delivered through a thoughtful weekly commentary, informed Berg's research more than any celebrated guru. It was Montgomery's cycle work that helped define the volatility window inside which the 1987 crash occurred.

How to read like an analyst

Berg's academic training — Medieval Jewish philosophy and Talmudic law — taught him to collect sources, weigh competing interpretations, challenge assumptions, and build conclusions from multiple lines of evidence at once. That is also, not coincidentally, how this reading list works: a growth technician, a data-driven timer, a pattern statistician, and a value fundamentalist, held together by one standard — show me the evidence.

Read that way, four books and 35 pages are worth more than a shelf.

This article draws on Milton Berg's interview with Leslie N. Masonson, published in the July 2026 issue of Technical Analysis of Stocks & Commodities (conducted by email in March 2026), together with MB Edge's published materials. Quotations are Berg's words from that interview.

Important disclosures

MB Edge publishes a long term hypothetical model. Any model performance referenced in this article is hypothetical and backtested, does not represent actual trading in any client account, and is not a guarantee of future results. This article is educational commentary only — it is not individualized investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security.

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