Mind Blowing Sector Returns
…sector. I guess that I am a little worried that we, myself included, are getting a little complacent about the low level of volatility. Yes, we have spikes here…
…sector. I guess that I am a little worried that we, myself included, are getting a little complacent about the low level of volatility. Yes, we have spikes here…
…come from completing high school (a 37.9 percent increase) and a college degree (a 42.6 percent increase). Unlike the unemployment rate, average incomes actually decline between the professional degrees and…
…Jones Industrial Average), they don’t do a whole lot for me personally. The NASDAQ story is interesting, though, not because of the round number, but because the current level brings…
…that characterized last week’s sharp daily losses may be over. My view of the recent market selloff has two components. First, as I outlined on last Monday, February 5th (click…
…the market subsides. The current level, 44, is still very elevated, so I’m not saying that the ‘all-clear’ whistle has blown, only that the panic is hopefully behind us. Bloomberg…
…market shrinks in the global financial crisis, but the average number of jobs created in the 2010s is about 200k. Then the pandemic comes along, and I clipped the chart…
…payback, I have to pay you 100 percent of revenues for ten straight years in dividends. That assumes I have zero cost-of-good-sold, which is very hard for a computer company….
Even in today’s economic environment, coming up with topics daily can be a challenge. So, when a reader asks a question, I am more than happy to answer it in…
…buy these bonds keep pretty close tabs on how the companies are doing. And soft patches in the economy hit these companies harder, and that translates into lower junk bond…
…the document, you can see why we’ve outsourced it: it’s an incredibly complex process that’s extremely time-consuming and labor intensive. It’s still very important and the Securities and Exchange Commission…