Bonkers Portfolio 8 – July 2018
Today’s post is a quick catch-up with the Bonkers Portfolio, which we last looked at in January.
Today’s post is a quick catch-up with the Bonkers Portfolio, which we last looked at in January.
In today’s post we try to build a Stock Screen from the characteristics of good stocks as shown in high Stock Ranks stocks.
We begin today’s Weekly Roundup in the FT, with the Chart That Tells A Story. This week it was about people leaving London.
Today’s post is our fourth visit to ERN’s mammoth series of articles on Safe Withdrawal Rates (SWRs).
Today’s post is our sixth and final visit to Andrew Craig’s book How to Own the World. We’ll be looking at Andrew’s more sophisticated investment plan.
Today’s post is the regular monthly update on the AIM IHT portfolio.
We begin today’s Weekly Roundup in the FT, with Tim Harford. He was looking at two potential solutions to a jobs crisis produced by automation.
Today’s post is about a recent report from the Institute for Fiscal Studies, on the the use of Wealth in Retirement.
Today’s post is a look at a recent Stockopedia webinar celebrating five years of their Stockranks metrics.
Active investing / Investor Diaries
by Mike Rawson · Published June 27, 2018 · Last modified May 14, 2020
Today’s post is another in the series of monthly roundups of the interesting investing tips I’ve come across, plus a summary of any trades that I make. Welcome to June 2018.
We start today’s Weekly Roundup in the FT, with the Chart That Tells A Story. This week it was about NIMBYs.
Today’s post is our third visit to ERN’s excellent series of articles on Safe Withdrawal Rates.
UK budget breakdown – income and spending
Becoming a Lloyd’s Name
Michael Platt – The Art and Science of Risk Control
Stan Weinstein’s Stage System 1 – Charts and Buying
Mark Minervini 1 – Specific Entry Point Analysis (SEPA®)
Leverage for the Long Run
Van Tharp 7 – Stops and Exits
Stan Weinstein’s Stage System 3 – Selling and Shorting
Freakonomics 4 – Names
John Bender – Question Everything
More
The price of anything is the amount of life you exchange for it.

