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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
The reason for the extreme concentration is the second striking feature of Shannon’s portfolio: He didn’t trim positions. Shannon simply remained invested in each as they grew. This allowed Motorola to compound his initial investment 57 times. Teledyne, his largest investment, grew an incredible 194 times. Hewlett-Packard, his second-largest holdin
... See moreAllen C. Benello • Concentrated Investing: Strategies of the World's Greatest Concentrated Value Investors
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.