Stock Screeners October 2019
Today’s post is the regular monthly update on the outputs produced by our stock screeners.
Today’s post is the regular monthly update on the outputs produced by our stock screeners.
We begin today’s Weekly Roundup in the FT, with the Chart That Tells A Story. This week it was about current account switching.
Today’s post is another slide deck – this time from a talk I gave at an active investing Meetup group last week.
Today’s post is our second visit to a new book by Rob Carver, one of our favourite financial authors. The book is called Leveraged Trading.
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 October 2019.
We begin today’s Weekly Roundup with Neil Woodford.
Today’s post is about Trend Equity, and looks at a paper from NewFound Research.
Today’s post is our first visit to a new book by Rob Carver, one of our favourite financial authors. The book is called Leveraged Trading.
by Mike Rawson · Published October 18, 2019 · Last modified June 17, 2020
Today’s post describes an attempt to build a Buffettology Stock Screen on the basis of a talk given by Keith Ashworth-Lord at Mello London 2018.
We begin today’s Weekly Roundup in the FT with the chart that tells a story, which this week was about mortgages.
Today’s post is the first in a series on factor investing, otherwise known as smart beta.
Today’s post pulls together the lessons from Robert Carver’s book Smart Portfolios.
UK budget breakdown – income and spending
Becoming a Lloyd’s Name
Michael Platt – The Art and Science of Risk Control
Mark Minervini 1 – Specific Entry Point Analysis (SEPA®)
Stan Weinstein’s Stage System 1 – Charts and Buying
Leverage for the Long Run
Van Tharp 7 – Stops and Exits
Freakonomics 4 – Names
Stan Weinstein’s Stage System 3 – Selling and Shorting
John Bender – Question Everything
More
Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen six, result happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pound ought and six, result misery.

