Monday links: learn and attack
- abnormalreturns
- December 27th, 2010
Quote of the day
Tom Brakke, “If you choose to pursue an MBA or a CFA, remember that they are built upon orthodoxy, by and large, which you need to learn and attack at the same time.” (the research puzzle)
Chart of the day
Don’t look now but gasoline prices are creeping back up. (VIX and More also Infectious Greed)
Markets
The week between Christmas and New Year’s has historically been bullish. (Bespoke)
Why Australian equities are an “obvious short” in 2011. (Jack H Barnes)
Eight things the stock market should be worried about. (DailyFinance)
Everybody is overweight emerging markets. (beyondbrics)
Patrick Burns, “Random walks are on a tightrope between mean reversion and momentum.” (Portfolio Probe)
Strategy and Tactics
Ken Griffin looks back on the twentieth anniversary of Citadel. (Dealbook also Chicago Breaking Business)
A quick education in spread trading. (Bigger Capital)
Measures of sentiment and valuation are decidedly imperfect. Indeed they don’t matter much in a bull market, until they matter. (AR Screencast)
How do you bring illiquidity into intrinsic valuation? (Aswath Damodaran)
Predictions are for entertainment, not investing. (Minyanville)
A positive review for the Little Book of Sideways Markets by Vitaliy Katsenelson. (zentrader via Money Game)
Companies
McDonald’s (MCD) is pushing variety in an attempt to continue its growth. (WSJ)
The smartphone explosion. (A VC, Howard Lindzon, Asymco, SAI)
Finance
Private equity has some IPOs it wants to sell you in 2011. (WSJ)
Goldman Sachs (GS) makes its change in compensation focus official. (footnoted)
How much is Sarbox to blame for the boom in start-up valuations? (GigaOM)
Why Chapter 11 cases are shrinking. (Dealbook)
Media
On the potential for feedback loops for users of textual analysis. (Atlantic Business)
How the media skews our view of reality. (Big Picture)
In the world of social media what you give comes back in droves. (The Minimalist Trader)
Economy
The Fed is going to look a lot different in 2011. (NYTimes)
The bond market sees an improving economy. (Econbrowser)
The “raise rates now” camp garners another adherent. (The Reformed Broker)
Job offers are on the rise. (Big Picture)
On the prospect for inflation. (Points and Figures)
Global
Japan’s budget is a mess. (WSJ, Money Game also Huffington Post)
Why don’t Chinese consumers spend more? (Curious Capitalist)
Vietnam’s prior push for growth is coming back to haunt it. (WSJ)
Listomania
Doug Kass’ full list of surprises for 2011. (Infectious Greed, Money Game)
The top 10 finance feuds of 2010. (The Reformed Broker)
The ten best new ETF launches of 2010. (ETFdb)
The top 10 hedge funds stories of 2010. (AR+Alpha via World Beta)
Thanks for checking in with Abnormal Returns. For all the latest you can follow us on StockTwits and Twitter.
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
-
