Thanks for checking in with us this weekend. Here are the most clicked on items on Abnormal Returns for the week ended Saturday, April 22nd, 2018. You can also read last week’s edition. The description reads as it does in the relevant linkfest:
Top clicks this week on the site
- Under what circumstances does dollar cost-averaging work? (bloomberg.com)
- Nine podcasts that financial advisors like. (investmentnews.com)
- Six precepts for long-term investing. (economist.com)
- What should you do if you don't know where the market is going. (ofdollarsanddata.com)
- 8 favors you should be willing to ask a neighbor. (artofmanliness.com)
- The Vomiting Camel "pattern" is now a thing. (ftalphaville.ft.com)
- Options strategies vs. hedge funds: a tale of the tape. (mrzepczynski.blogspot.com)
- The collapse of public pension funds are closer than you think. (bloomberg.com)
- Five traits that billionaires share. (ritholtz.com)
- Five misconceptions about index funds. (morningstar.com)
Also on the site this week
- You make the call: are endowment fund returns a function of risk capacity or superior active management? (abnormalreturns.com)
- There is no equity risk premium without living, breathing companies. (abnormalreturns.com)
- Why digging sustainable economic moats is so difficult. (abnormalreturns.com)
- Dave Nadig at ETF.com on "the resources I find most valuable on a day-to-day/week-to-week basis." (etf.com)