Who’s In Charge of Your Retirement?

One of the more alarming retirement statistics you’re likely to read these days is just how unready Americans are to actually retire. I’ll pick just one as an example: The … Read more

Posted on January 16, 2013 by

Are Great Money Managers Great, or Just Lucky?

If you figured out how to trade the markets with a high certainty of profits and limited risk — by definition the job of paid money managers — would you … Read more

Posted on January 15, 2013 by

Fund Fees: Slash Them Early

It’s sometimes hard to impress upon people the impact of fund fees. In a recent Wall Street Journal article, however, I saw the perfect example sitting about halfway through the piece. The article isn’t … Read more

Posted on January 10, 2013 by

Are You a ‘Yo-Yo Diet’ Saver? Time for Simple Investing

Let’s talk simple investing tricks: You probably know this person. Perpetually overweight but always on a diet. Reads stacks of books on healthy eating. A closet crammed with workout clothes … Read more

Posted on January 9, 2013 by

Sentiment Investing: You Can’t Win If You Don’t Finish

“Psst! Want in on a secret new way to ‘know’ what’s going to happen in the markets? Look no further…” Sounds great, right? And that’s the implicit promise of trading systems … Read more

Posted on January 7, 2013 by
diversification

Don’t Fall for ‘Fake’ Diversification

You hear this all the time from financial advisors: Get diversification in your portfolio, pronto! If you’re even slightly activist in your investment life, though, diversification can feel like wimping … Read more

Posted on January 4, 2013 by

Driving a Compact Down Wall Street

High-end sports cars are great. They’re fun to drive and fun to look at. Who doesn’t turn their head when a fancy Lambo or some exotic supercar pulls alongside in … Read more

Posted on January 3, 2013 by

Five Post ‘Fiscal Cliff’ Facts to Consider

In the final hours, right up to the deadline (naturally), we got a vote out of the House. America won’t plunge over the so-called “fiscal cliff.” Taxes will go up on some … Read more

Posted on January 2, 2013 by
Casey Stengel

Five Investing Rules from Baseball’s Casey Stengel

Modern investing owes a lot to behavioral finance research, the scientific study of how we make choices, particularly about money. Nevertheless, and with apologies to baseball great Casey Stengel, investing … Read more

Posted on December 28, 2012 by
emotions

Robert Arnott: Leave Emotions Out of Investing

We’ve written a lot in the past about the importance of emotion-free investing. Now one of the top investors on Wall Street, Robert Arnott, is saying the same: If you can … Read more

Posted on December 26, 2012 by