With Wi - Fi calling on board, 3.2 megapixel camera and the
typical slew of Google features this phone should see plenty of
stockings come this holiday... [read full
article]
Other areas of minor emphasis will include case studies in dumb behavior not to emulate,
typical investments that have a hidden or not widely - discussed risk, and even
articles on convertible
stocks which let you collect income upfront and convert into common
stock at a certain ratio that can be conducive to an investor that wants income now while leaving the door open to the possibility of large capital gains that can help improve your net worth.
Revisiting P / E10, Revisiting P / E10: Dividends, NFB Closed, Links Repaired, The Big Project, Calculator D, Long - Term
Stock Returns, My Most Recent
Articles, Dividend Calculators A and B, Dividend Growth Sensitivity Study, Three Powerful Advantages of Dividend Strategies, Calculator H, CTVR Calculator A, Dividends and Constant Terminal Value Rates, HCTVR Calculator A, May 2006 Highlights, Investment Traps, Variable Terminal Value Rate Calculator A, Variable Terminal Value Rate Calculator B, Why People Ignore Valuations, Latching Calculators, Latched Threshold Survey, Investing for Dummy — The Six «Must Know» Rules, Early Success with Latch and Hold, Continued Success with Latch and Hold, Adding Constraints to Latch and Hold, Time To Catch Up Calculator Notes through June 12, 2006 The Lower Latch and Hold Threshold, Additional Constraints with Latch and Hold, Current Research I: Latch and Hold, Dividend Investors, The Accumulation Stage, Idiot Switching, Latch and Hold Spreadsheet A,
Typical Values of P / E10, Growth with Switching, Special Note about Mean Reversion, No New Discovery This Time, Looking a Little Bit Harder, The
Stock - Return Predictor, Calculator I. Notes starting June 13, 2006.
Consider the holding period for mutual funds and index funds to be indefinite, and then consider three types of
stock investor: (i) AAII Model Portfolio, currently with 27
stocks; (ii) A
typical investor as cited in the related Steven Sears
article holding 27
stocks for an average 3.27 - year holding period (turnover ratio 30.58 %); and (iii) An investor who holds 27
stocks for the five - year average
typical of a market cycle (20 % turnover ratio).
Mostly the
article simply repeats old nonsense, but there is one new deceptive argument
typical of those like Jacoby who know nothing and whose
stock in trade is bluster about everything including climate change.