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Learning Center

Remember The Nonfinancial Assets

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One of the more common investment mistakes that individual investors—and sometimes even professional advisors—make when they’re developing a comprehensive financial plan is failing to account for important nonfinancial assets. Financial assets are easily observable and typically liquid. Thus, they’re often the center of attention. On the other hand, assets such as labor capital (the mortality-weighted...

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The Worst Financial Advice to Give a College Grad

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I think just about the worst financial advice you can give to a recent college graduate is: “Buy stocks in companies whose products and services you like.” On the surface, advice to “buy what you know” is well-intentioned. After all, saving and investing early and often helps a young investor harness the amazing power of...

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High Frequency Trading & Price Efficiency

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The effect of high-frequency trading on market quality has generated strong interest among academics, investors and regulators alike. To further explore the impact high-frequency trading can have on the markets, Jennifer Conrad, Sunil Wahal and Jin Xiang—authors of the study “High Frequency Quoting, Trading, and the Efficiency of Prices”—conducted two types of tests: (a) unconditional...

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Questions That Need Answers

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It’s no wonder that you are confused. The financial media inundates investors every day with a barrage of irrelevant — and often misleading — information. You might think every conceivable question about investing has been fully explored by now and that the answers to the majority of inquiries would be obvious. Not true. Here are...

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What is the FDIC and what are its insurance limits?

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Q: What is the FDIC and what are its insurance limits? A: The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) was created in 1933 in response to many bank failures during the Great Depression. Its goal is to preserve and promote confidence in the financial system by insuring bank deposits. Because insured deposits are backed by the...

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Staying Out of Your Neighbor’s Business

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Humans can be a competitive lot. The way we posture and position ourselves to stand out in a group seems to happen instinctively. After all, in the past we competed for resources and survival. Our lives depended on it. Today, we still compete, but for different reasons. Instead of food, we compete for attention and...

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Deconstructing Invesco’s Performance

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The February 9 edition of Barron’s contained its annual listing of “best fund families” for the past one, five and 10 calendar years. Of all the fund families on the list, Invesco was the only one that managed to make the top four in each of the periods. In fact, it was the only fund...

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Investors Pay Premiums For Bad Bets

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The first formal asset pricing model—the capital asset pricing model—was built on certain assumptions, including that investors are risk-averse; will maximize the expected utility of absolute wealth; and care only about the mean and variance of return. However, academic research has found that these assumptions don’t necessarily hold. In the real world, some investors have...

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