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13 votes
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The Treasury yield stress point
5 votes -
The Future of Corporate Governance Part I: The Problem of Twelve
8 votes -
Arlan Hamilton is building a new kind of venture capital - An interview with the founder of Backstage Capital
3 votes -
Despite the pandemic, venture capital investments in US-based companies set records in 2020, with almost $130B raised and 318 mega-rounds worth $100M or more
4 votes -
Waiting for the last dance - The hazards of asset allocation in a late-stage major bubble
10 votes -
How is the stock market at an all time high?
8 votes -
Investors bet giant companies will dominate after crisis
7 votes -
Drugmakers urged to collaborate on coronavirus vaccine
6 votes -
Norway's sovereign wealth fund made a 19.9% return on investment last year, earning a record 1.69 trillion Norwegian crowns ($180 billion)
15 votes -
How to best utilise 5k GBP
Hey everyone, as a goal for this coming year I’d like to better put to use the small amount of savings I have. My first idea is: 3k emergency fund in a NS&I Government insured account. 2k in a...
Hey everyone, as a goal for this coming year I’d like to better put to use the small amount of savings I have.
My first idea is:
- 3k emergency fund in a NS&I Government insured account.
- 2k in a Vanguard index fund.
A few questions:
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Is this sort of setup the best use for such a sum?
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If so, with the impending brexit, does it makes sense to move the money out of the U.K?
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Is there much maintenance with an index fund or is it sufficient to let the money sit? I’m aware anything of this nature is essentially a gamble.
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How do you calculate a worthwhile amount to invest considering the on-running service costs?
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Does anyone have experience with ethical index funds? If so which? And how have they performed for you?
Any help is most appreciated.
11 votes -
Why do we tolerate Saudi money in tech?
14 votes -
The ordinary investors aren’t real
5 votes -
Brokering bricks: The world of Lego investing
4 votes -
New bond lets investors turn a profit while helping California prevent fires
3 votes -
Financial Bubbles are the Gnostic Heresy: The Voegelin-Minsky Synthesis
5 votes -
Unprofitable companies are raising the most IPO cash since the dot-com era
12 votes -
Beyond Meat has hit the ‘short-squeeze trifecta’ as borrow fees keep soaring
18 votes -
Cryptocurrency pioneer Justin Sun pays US$4.57M for lunch with Warren Buffett
7 votes -
US President Donald Trump’s trade war threat poses problems for China and investors
6 votes -
‘Historic breakthrough’: Norway’s giant oil fund dives into renewables
7 votes -
Thoughts about investing in Weed stocks?
4 votes -
Remember Bitcoin? Some investors might want to forget
8 votes -
"The debt-deflation theory of great depressions" by Irving Fisher
5 votes -
Elon Musk says Tesla came "within single-digit weeks" of death
12 votes -
After the Bitcoin boom: Hard lessons for cryptocurrency investors
9 votes -
US teachers' union urges pensions to cut investment in private prisons
6 votes -
A Financial Book discussion - Because we don't have a ~money sub yet
I'm re-reading through some investment books right now and thought I'd throw one them out here with my thoughts and questions. Investing and the Irrational Mind: Rethink Risk, Outwit Optimism, and...
I'm re-reading through some investment books right now and thought I'd throw one them out here with my thoughts and questions.
Investing and the Irrational Mind: Rethink Risk, Outwit Optimism, and Seize Opportunities Others Miss
by Robert Koppel
The title of this one intrigued me. Author Robert Koppel is a former investor/trader on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. He covers a lot of research on what psychologists have discovered about biases and irrational thinking, particularly as it relates to investing and trading. He's also interviewed many other investors and offers his own observations from extensive experience.
He goes back and forth between having and investment plan and using intuition, which as it turns out are both tactics investors have used. I think the valuable part of this book is the way he ties in research by Nobel Prize winner Daniel Kahneman and others on biases to what happens when we make good and not so good decisions in finance. An example of one of those common pitfalls:
We also experience a reflection effect whereby individuals make irrational choices to enter or exit an investment based on a subjective reference point determined by whether they have already experienced a gain or a loss. An example of this would be someone waiting for a “breakeven” price before exiting from an investment that is performing poorly rather than looking at the market objectively, without reference to the purchase price.
The book isn't so much an investment strategy but rather a good overview of what's involved in the process. As someone who has handled his own investments for years, I found that Koppel's book is realistic and practical, especially for those of us who've had to make those hard decisions on buying and selling, either for the long term or short term.
My own particular problem is watching things too closely and losing a sense of longer term movement. Investing And The Irrational Mind is a great tool for giving me pause and reflecting on the mistakes I've fallen into over the years.
Even as basic a rule as "cut your losses short" is hard to follow and really give me pause to think about issues I've held onto for too long as well as others that went on to go up and away. I've love to hear your thoughts.
6 votes -
Why Tesla stock skyrocketed and got halted - Elon Musk is "considering" taking Tesla private in a $70 billion deal
12 votes -
How to invest for the next recession
4 votes -
Dow Jones futures slump more than 350 points as fears of a US-China trade war ratchet up
6 votes -
What the stock market's most crucial week of the year tells us about the road ahead
5 votes -
Can we get a ~finance group?
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but there's no good fit for topics ranging from personal finance, investing, portfolio management, budgeting, running a business, markets, etc. Seems ~finance or...
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but there's no good fit for topics ranging from personal finance, investing, portfolio management, budgeting, running a business, markets, etc. Seems ~finance or similar could be a catch-all for a massive category of topics that don't have a place currently.
6 votes