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Top clicks this week on Abnormal Returns

Thanks for checking in with us this weekend.  Here are the items our readers clicked most frequently on  Abnormal Returns for the week ended Saturday, March 19th, 2011. The description is as it reads in the relevant linkfest.

  1. Have markets overreacted? (FT Alpahville)
  2. What happens to the S&P 500 after a long run above its 50 day moving average comes to an end?  (WoodShedder)
  3. TED, “The existence and ineluctability of tail risk should teach us two things: radical humility, and the imperative to live life now, while it is still in our grasp.”  (The Epicurean Dealmaker)
  4. Where Jeff Gundlach is allocating money in a multi-asset portfolio.  (Pragmatic Capitalism)
  5. All the cool kids are trading at night.  (Forbes)
  6. How to displace emotion with analysis.  (A Dash of Insight)
  7. Barton Biggs on market valuations and the attraction of blue chips.  (ValuePlays)
  8. Apple (AAPL) breaks down.  (Bespoke)
  9. Ray Dalio, “Currency devaluations are good for stocks, good for commodities and good for gold. They are not good for bonds.”  (Barron’s)
  10. Prop traders are going to find the going tougher outside of a big firm.  (Reuters)

We also had a handful of items on Abnormal Returns this week:

  1. ARTV on talking your book.  (Abnormal Returns)
  2. A behind-the-scenes look at why (pricing power) Warren Buffett purchased Lubrizol.  (AR Screencast)
  3. Volatility reigns in the uranium/nuclear sector but there is more than one way to trade them.  (AR Screencast)
  4. Netflix (NFLX) is acting like an insurgent by disrupting the traditional business model of the TV networks.  (AR Screencast)
  5. Why your company should embrace March Madness.  (Abnormal Returns)
  6. In the wake of the Sendai earthquake markets are sorting through relative sector winners and losers.  (AR Screencast)

Thanks for checking in with Abnormal Returns. For all the latest you can follow us on StockTwits and Twitter.

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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.

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