The Domino's effect: why stockbrokers give bad advice about taking profits
A high price-to-earnings ratio doesn't mean a stock is overpriced, it means the market thinks the earnings estimates are wrong.
A high price-to-earnings ratio doesn't mean a stock is overpriced, it means the market thinks the earnings estimates are wrong.
For equity investors, the results season is like a battlefield during an artillery barrage. This is your survival guide.
If someone calls trying to sell you the Brooklyn Bridge, you'd run a mile. It's no different if they're offering Airbnb shares instead.
The market falls on the back of the Brexit vote have triggered an avalanche of somewhat predictable motherhood statements about why you shouldn't sell your investments.
Everyone sets out to buy stocks that go up forever and are never sold. That's nirvana. But it obviously doesn't happen that way.
Hybrid issues for the banks are flying off the shelves once again, but there are downsides for investors.
These are the X factors that the fund managers are most worried about, the events that could drop the market significantly more than "normal".
Listening to, reading and watching reactionary research, commentary and media on a 24-hour basis makes you dumber not smarter.
The danger of passive investing under the mantle of a long-term focus is highlighted by the fact that most of the 10 biggest stocks in Australia have a share price lower than one, five or 10 years ago.
Certainty sells but reality is uncertain, making long-term investment arrogant.
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