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Quote of the day
“Change is most likely to take root when we deeply value aspects of ourselves and work on those to become the best possible versions of who we already are.” – Brett Steenbarger
Chart of the day

Weed stocks are getting crushed. (@charliebilello via @howardlindzon)
Markets
- The yield curve is no longer inverted. (valueplays.net)
- Pretty much any kind of trade deal with China would help at this point. (dashofinsight.com)
- Checking in on the valuation of some recent high-profile IPOs. (aswathdamodaran.blogspot.com)
Strategy
- Does it make sense to mix religion and investing? (wsj.com)
- Where did all the 'stock market wizards' go? (awealthofcommonsense.com)
- What bonds serve best as protection against stock market downturns? (gordianadvisors.com)
- When dividends lie. (alephblog.com)
Crypto
Companies
- Apple ($AAPL) has a China problem. (vox.com)
- Fast-food chains are getting into the 'ghost kitchen' game. (businessinsider.com)
Funds
Policy
- What's the point of the Economics Nobel? (bnnbloomberg.ca)
- Some economists who could very well have won the Nobel in Economics. (conversableeconomist.blogspot.com)
- How much has the cap on state and local real estate and income taxes cost homeowners? (fortune.com)
- Stop saying US tax rates are NOT progressive! (marginalrevolution.com)
- The case for the US Treasury issuing ultralong debt. (alephblog.com)
Economy
- How America's great shale oil boom is changing. (finance.yahoo.com)
- A succinct summary of the week's economic events. (ritholtz.com)
- The economic schedule for the coming week. (calculatedriskblog.com)
Earlier on Abnormal Returns
- Top clicks this week on the site. (abnormalreturns.com)
- What you missed in our Saturday linkfest. (abnormalreturns.com)
- Longform links: disrupted habits. (abnormalreturns.com)
Mixed media
- Tim Harford, "At the moment, everyone seems to agree that half the people in the country are ignorant, wicked or both. The only disagreement is over which half." (ft.com)
- Physicians were once reliably Republican. Not any more. (wsj.com)
- Media bubbles aren't the biggest reason for increased partisanship. (fivethirtyeight.com)