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AHL's machines ape grassroots science
These machines are way too clever to be trading high-risk events like Brexit, and are looking for more mundane sources of riches.
These machines are way too clever to be trading high-risk events like Brexit, and are looking for more mundane sources of riches.
Fund managers question whether "extreme" premiums paid for safe yield stocks is finally cracking.
If we do get a correction in the equity market, we will finally work out what the big yield stocks are really worth.
"It's hard to paint a picture where the situation is going to be better in three years than it is now."
Mugunthan Siva on investing in the maker of 250cc motorcycles and Jockey briefs, not Tata Motors and Reliance Industries.
The Group of 20 economies' job is getting harder and ineffective direction is not helping its cause, UBS says.
Artisan's Mike Schneider finds technologies that are on the cusp of new applications or geographies. Here's his top picks.
Top fund managers discuss their standout stock pick for the year ahead.
Six top fund managers discuss the 2015-16 earnings season and what they're looking for in the year ahead.
Listed investment companies appear to be trading at a 1 per cent premium, but they are not all equal.
No dividends from Santos and Origin Energy drag 2015-16 dividends into contraction territory on a per share basis.
Since Brexit, all of Kerr Neilson's Platinum's strategies have beat the market by 2 to 4 per cent.
Facing outflows, Kerr Neilson says his confidence in stockpicking over ETFs is unshaken.
The world's top central bankers are due to meet this weekend at Jackson Hole and monetary settings are likely to be high on the agenda.
Dean Fergie's C3G fund returned 41.4 per cent over 2016, and he sees "massive" growth in small caps that feed our social media lives.
Speculation persists that the RBA is growing more tolerant of the higher Australian dollar through its lack of commentary on the currency.
Low yields have hurt QBEs investment returns which means the insurer has to work harder on its 'day job.'
Bank stocks are close to the cheapest they have been in 20 years, but the risk is they stay that way.
After all four major banks reported, nobody is any closer to knowing if they have to raise capital again.
Softer than expected retail sales data out of the United States forced a rethink of the strength implied by labour figures a week ago.
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