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Edwards and Magee book [Technical Analysis of Stock Trends].
Jack D. Schwager • Unknown Market Wizards: The best traders you've never heard of
Refinement, Expansion, and Production (REP)
Jonathan Fields • Uncertainty: Turning Fear and Doubt into Fuel for Brilliance
J.A. McCullough
Philipp Meyer • The Son
Back in 1966, a goateed Stanford professor named Bill Sharpe developed a formula that has since become as common in investment-speak as RBIs are in baseball-speak. The formula looks like this:
Russell Wild • Exchange-Traded Funds for Dummies
So, the Sharpe ratio measures risk-adjusted returns. And, the higher the number, the better. Also, the riskless rate of return that we use as a comparison to what we’re actually getting is the yield on 3-month T-Bills. So, if an investment gets a 10% return when the yield on 3-month T-Bills was 5%, we’re down to 5% of excess return. If the standard
... See moreRobert Walker • Pass The 65: A PLAIN ENGLISH EXPLANATION TO HELP YOU PASS THE SERIES 65 EXAM - UPDATED FOR 2017
$1.2 million risk-adjusted value.