Friday links: welcome back TED
- abnormalreturns
- November 18th, 2011
Quote of the day
Jason Zweig on Bill Miller, “Rack up big losses—or big gains—in obscurity and no one notices. Lose a lot of money once you are a star and no one will forget.” (WSJ, ibid)
Chart of the day
Welcome the TED spread back to the conversation. (I Heart Wall Street, Calculated Risk)
Markets
Stock returns around Thanksgiving Day. (CXO Advisory Group)
Today’s environment is filled with an “excess of disconnects.” (Capital Spectator)
Widely divergent outcomes favor the prepared. (Interloper)
There is not enough commercial paper to go around. (WSJ)
Natural gas is wicked cheap compared to crude oil. (Carpe Diem)
Your go-to guide for option pinning. (Investing With Options)
Dividends
Dividend stocks are outperforming. (Bespoke)
Are REITS inevitably going to benefit from ongoing demand for dividends? (Focus on Funds)
How well do dividend strategies sort country returns? (World Beta)
Financial advisers
Selling legacy stock can be tough, despite ultra low capital gains rates. (Total Return)
Managing risk for financial advisers is always job one. (Financial Adviser)
The ten clients from hell. (Registered Rep)
Companies
Putting the decline in Salesforce.com ($CRM) into perspective. (chessNwine)
Apple ($AAPL) is becoming a GARP name. (Bloomberg)
Can Netflix ($NFLX) afford to make a comeback? (Atlantic Wire)
The much anticipated Facebook IPO is closer than you think. (SAI)
Technology
Five questions about a potential Amazon ($AMZN) smartphone. (SplatF)
The Kindle Fire is going to cause Apple to cut iPad prices. (Slate also Marco Ament)
This product is Yahoo’s ($YHOO) last, best hope. (SAI)
Why Siri changes everything. (Fortune)
How Spotify is changing music listening. (SplatF)
Finance
MF Global apparently used customer funds to back their poor trades. (Dealbook)
How to identify program trading. (Dynamic Hedge)
How market on close orders are helping to cause late day volatility. (FT Alphaville)
CME Group ($CME) is no longer the darling of Wall Street. (Points and Figures)
How to fix the ratings agency incentives. (Dealbreaker)
Funds
What does it say when a bond index fund leads its category? (WSJ)
$EEM is now playing catch up with $VWO. (IndexUniverse)
Some details on the forthcoming AdvisorShares Global Alpha & Beta ETF ($RRGR). (IndexUniverse)
Global
The debate over the role of the ECB and potential monetization rolls on. (WSJ, Global Macro Monitor)
The global deleveraging story in charts. (FT Alphaville)
UK banks have been cutting their exposure to Euro banks. (FT)
The decision for Germany is stark: inflation or chaos. (Money Game)
It took a while but Euro doomsayers are returning to prominence. (NYTimes)
Economy
Leading indicators point to continued economic strength. (Real Time Economics, EconomPic Data)
Maybe we should be looking at the ratio of coincident to lagging indicators? (Economics Musings, MarketBeat)
Heavy truck sales are bouncing back. (Calculated Risk)
Housing market woes are easing, albeit slowly. (WSJ, Crackerjack Finance, Bonddad Blog)
The longevity crisis is coming. (Above the Market, ibid)
Earlier on Abnormal Returns
What you missed in our Friday morning linkfest. (Abnormal Returns)
Books
Read James Rickards’ Currency Wars: The Making of the Next Global Crisis as a history of the currency markets. (Big Picture)
A review of Robert Franks’ The High-Beta Rich: How the Manic Wealthy Will Take Us to the Next Boom, Bubble, and Bust. (Rogue Economist Rants)
Some lessons from Michael Martin’s The Inner Voice of Trading: Eliminate the Noise, and Profit from the Strategies That Are Right for You. (Finance Trends Matter)
Mixed media
Physics is in turmoil as new findings call into question existing theories. (Nature, Atlantic Wire)
Interleague play will soon be an everyday fact of baseball. (SportsBiz Blog)
More parking spots kill cities. (Felix Salmon)
Abnormal Returns is a founding member of the StockTwits Blog Network.
Abnormal Returns is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. If you click on my Amazon.com links and buy anything, even something other than the product advertised, I earn a small commission, yet you don't pay any extra. Thank you for your support.
The information in this blog post represents my own opinions and does not contain a recommendation for any particular security or investment. I or my affiliates may hold positions or other interests in securities mentioned in the Blog, please see my Disclaimer page for my full disclaimer.
blog comments powered by Disqus-
Abnormal Returns has over its six-year life become fixture in the financial blogosphere. Over thousands of posts we have striven to bring the best of the financial blogosphere to readers. In that time the idea of a “forecast-free investment blog” remains as useful as it did six years ago. More » -
Recent Posts
- Wednesday links: Dow divergences
- Controversy is catnip to the financial media
- Wednesday 7atSeven: fighting the market
- Tuesday links: emotional risk of investing
- Tuesday 7atSeven: Greece 2
- Monday links: innovation and humility
- Sunday links: timing matters
- Top clicks this week on Abnormal Returns
- Saturday links: sub-optimal risk taking
- Friday links: out of office reply
-
Archives
-
