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8 votes
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Whole Foods workers seek to unionize, says Amazon is ‘exploiting our dedication’
13 votes -
Ten years after Lehman—Lessons learned and challenges ahead
6 votes -
How to retire in your thirties with $1 Million in the bank
19 votes -
Meet the table busser who’s worked at the same pancake house for fifty-four years and still makes minimum wage
14 votes -
'Is this a red line for us?' $15b European trade deal doomed if Australia dodges Paris pledge.
7 votes -
The rise of giant consumer startups that said no to investor money
9 votes -
Bank of America freezing accounts of customers suspected of not being US citizens
18 votes -
Y Combinator plans to start doling out $60 million next year to study universal basic income
22 votes -
Walt Disney World workers reach deal for $15 minimum wage by 2021
13 votes -
The markets: Private economy and capitalism in North Korea?
5 votes -
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan faults US for frail economy: good politics, but risky policy
5 votes -
Brexit stage left: Spending cuts and British strategic denial
9 votes -
After the Bitcoin boom: Hard lessons for cryptocurrency investors
9 votes -
The shareholder value myth
5 votes -
Most CRA auditors polled say Canada's tax system is skewed to protect the wealthy
8 votes -
This burrito includes an arbitration clause
8 votes -
A landmark ruling that has granted a casual worker annual leave entitlements has sparked warnings from unions and employer groups that a clearer definition of casual employment is needed.
6 votes -
Where even Walmart won’t go: How Dollar General took over rural America
8 votes -
Elon Musk’s funding for Tesla wasn’t so secure
13 votes -
Canada doesn’t have an inheritance tax. For the sake of democracy, that needs to change.
23 votes -
Americans own less stuff, and that’s reason to be nervous
16 votes -
African economy: The limits of ‘leapfrogging’
3 votes -
Petty charges, princely profits
5 votes -
Vanguard warns of worsening odds for the economy and markets
5 votes -
Elon Musk’s Tesla funding wasn’t quite ‘secured’ after all
9 votes -
Where even Walmart won't go: How Dollar General took over rural America
13 votes -
US teachers' union urges pensions to cut investment in private prisons
6 votes -
Foreigners face ban on buying homes in New Zealand after apocalypse bolthole fad hikes prices
7 votes -
Tesla CEO Musk accused in lawsuit of defrauding shareholders
17 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 -
The rules of monopoly
9 votes -
Tesla shorts lose more than $1 billion on post-earnings surge
15 votes -
Wells Fargo may have accidentally foreclosed 400 US homes
10 votes -
China’s empire of money is reshaping global trade
3 votes -
PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi is stepping down after twelve years
5 votes -
"Xi's world order - July 2024" (Economics and speculative fiction - a sampling from this week's Economist)
7 votes -
The NRA says it’s in deep financial trouble, may be ‘unable to exist’
8 votes -
Hammacher Schlemmer: The world's most peculiar company
6 votes -
The Bank of England has raised the interest rate to 0.75% - the highest level since March 2009
7 votes -
Competition regulator to assess Nine's proposed takeover of Fairfax for impact on media diversity
3 votes -
Auditors: 30M taxpayers will owe more due to low withholding
11 votes -
Why Australia wants to build its own 'Belt and Road' scheme with Japan and the US to rival China's investment
3 votes -
China in Africa: Win-win development, or a new colonialism?
9 votes -
US competes with China’s ‘Belt and Road Initiative’ with $113 million Asian investment programme
9 votes -
Follow the new Silk Road
3 votes -
Australian drivers in revolt over 'pay cuts' as Uber faces new competition
5 votes -
Punk evolutionist: An interview with Greg Graffin
2 votes -
Target’s CBGB tribute draws backlash, followed by an apology
3 votes