Wednesday links: leaving money on the table
- abnormalreturns
- January 25th, 2012
Quote of the day
David Merkel, “Financial intermediation leaves money on the table. It does not seek the best investment outcome, but takes a lesser return, so that goals can be achieved with greater certainty.” (Aleph Blog)
Chart of the day
The farmland boom: the Sioux County, Iowa edition. (research puzzle pix)
Markets
On the slowing growth in earnings. (MarketBeat, Crossing Wall Street)
The story of two risk indexes. (Sober Look)
Why daytraders shouldn’t ignore overnight gaps. (Adam Grimes)
Bonds
There is room for muni bonds to correct in here. (Dragonfly Capital)
Using historical bond returns to measure market conditions. (Dynamic Hedge)
Bonds still represent a diversification opportunity. (Morningstar)
Strategy
Thinking about how dividend policies affect ROE. (Frank Voisin)
These companies, largely MLPs, continue to increase their dividends on a quarterly basis. (Dynamic Dividend)
Investors are likely overpaying for safety these days. (Morningstar)
Research
On the importance of systematic risk for hedge fund returns. (SSRN via CXOAG)
High short interest? Sell the bonds. (Alea)
Internet
Tracking the price of Internet domain names. (FT Alphaville)
Google ($GOOG) knows you are and its going to tell the world. (WSJ also Modeled Behavior)
Finance
The futures industry escaped the financial crisis only to be brought low by the collapse of MF Global. (Dealbook)
Social media for finance goes pro with the new, albeit beta, StockTwits Pro. (Howard Lindzon)
The first seven ETFs of 2012. (Invest With An Edge)
Global
The UK economy contracted in the last quarter of 2011. (FT)
What happens if Greece can’t come to an agreement with bondholders? (Felix Salmon)
The situation is Europe is still untenable. (Credit Writedowns)
A nice visualization of the slowdown in global economic growth pre- and post-crisis. (Global Macro Monitor also Real Time Economics)
Economy
The Fed now sees exceptionally low rates through 2014. (Calculated Risk, MarketBeat)
Another indicator showing slowing inflation. (Carpe Diem)
Why Silicon Valley seems to be an economy unto itself. (Free exchange)
Earlier on Abnormal Returns
Nobody knows nothing: Apple ($AAPL) earnings edition. (Abnormal Returns)
What you missed in our Wednesday morning linkfest. (Abnormal Returns)
Mixed media
Brown fat is kind of like dark matter. We know it exists, but is still a mystery. (NYTimes)
Unclutter your working space to focus better. (Farnam Street)
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