Quote of the Day
"Whenever someone starts talking about the dollar, your go to move should be to view the data."
(Barry Ritholtz)
Retail trading
- It's hard to ignore the impact of retail traders on the stock market. (theirrelevantinvestor.com)
- The four types of Robinhood traders including the "YOLO trader." (awealthofcommonsense.com)
- We seem to have passed peak meme-stock. (wsj.com)
- Retail traders are now on Clubhouse. (grayscaleinvest.medium.com)
Crypto
- Grayscale is committed to transitioning the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust ($GBTC) into an ETF. (nasdaq.com)
- Just how independent are Coinbase's ($COIN) independent diretors? (wsj.com)
Finance
- Subprime auto borrowers are increasingly falling behind on payments. (wsj.com)
- Billionaire Bill Foley is a well-respected SPAC heavyweight. (wsj.com)
Fund management
- Mistakes don't often work in favor of investors - the Vanguard error did. (morningstar.com)
- What do you really get with a SPAC-focused ETF? (wsj.com)
Housing
- More people are going to list their houses for sale in 2021. (redfin.com)
- Single-family rental companies are still actively buying up properties. (wsj.com)
- Rising home prices are not a U.S.-only phenomenon. (economist.com)
Economy
- The March ISM Services index is at a record high. (crossingwallstreet.com)
- The market rebound has been good for state and local pension funds. (ft.com)
Earlier on Abnormal Returns
- Adviser links: money with a purpose. (abnormalreturns.com)
- What you missed in our Sunday linkfest. (abnormalreturns.com)
- The most-read items last week on the site. (abnormalreturns.com)
- Are you a financial adviser looking for some out-of-the-box thinking? Then check out our weekly e-mail newsletter. (newsletter.abnormalreturns.com)
Mixed media
- The new work environment is already live in Australia. (wsj.com)
- Getting on elevators is going to be a big step for people returning to work. (marker.medium.com)
- Post-pandemic vacations are going to blend work and play. (bloomberg.com)
- A lot of people learned they don't like working in an office this past year. (nytimes.com)