Seconding what Vaniver said, and I'm pretty sure the efficient market hypothesis applies as much to forums dispensing investment advice as it does to investing itself. And at least if you were looking for individual gurus, there wouldn't be the possibility of Eternal September turning the advice quality to dirt once the forum becomes known.
Not looking for stock picks, just general advice on what to study, good books, skills to master, etc... like LW, just specifically geared for investment advice.
Hello I'm looking for the LW on investing advice. Any suggestions? Thanks.
EDIT:
Several commenters gave the standard advice of "buy index funds". If you bought into the Nikkei between 87 and 94 you would have made a loss or very little gains until now(30 years later). So I would appreciate some more in depth discussion regarding when is it good to invest into index funds? If you search in reddit/r/investing you will find more nuanced point of views.
http://finance.yahoo.com/echarts?s=%5EN225+Interactive#%7B%22range%22%3A%22max%22%2C%22scale%22%3A%22linear%22%7D
In general index funds will reflect the underlying economy, in the case of the US it was a growing economy for the most part of the 20th century, so the index fund would be good advice in that time period. I have a hard time believing that it is still good advice now, when the economy is retracting or stagnating.
TLDR: reddit/r/investing has more nuanced discussions.