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The Motley Fool May 5, 2005 Timothy M. Otte |
Behaving Like a Fool The debate between efficient markets and behavioral finance continues to rage in academic circles. Here are some of the key differences in the two approaches to the movements of stock prices. |
The Motley Fool October 17, 2005 Bill Mann |
Is It a Company or a Rembrandt? Stock prices can wander up and down, but company performance eventually anchors them. Stocks are ownership in a company. Forget that, and you're looking for trouble in the long term. |
The Motley Fool June 28, 2007 Bill Barker |
Warren Buffett Issues Death Threat Like Buffett, you should focus on stocks and companies that are out of the limelight. Unlike Buffett, you have the opportunity to purchase small-cap companies, which historically have proven to have significantly better returns than large caps. |
The Motley Fool August 21, 2008 Julie Clarenbach |
Consider This Before You Buy Another Stock How to find the risk/reward sweet spot in your portfolio. |
The Motley Fool October 18, 2006 Chuck Saletta |
Your Edge Over Buffett With less competition chasing a larger pool of great potential investments, you've got a far better chance of finding and buying great stocks. |
The Motley Fool November 18, 2009 Jim Royal |
Buffett and Soros Are Buying Retail. Why Aren't You? The Oracle takes aim at a retail giant. |
The Motley Fool June 23, 2006 Mike Norman |
It's Just Too Hard The best way to invest can also be the most difficult. Waiting for shares of good companies to become cheap takes patience as well. |
The Motley Fool August 22, 2007 Selena Maranjian |
Profit While the Dollar Sinks You might think that a falling dollar doesn't affect you, as you're not traveling anywhere. But if you're a broad investor, you may be more affected than you realize. |
The Motley Fool September 26, 2006 David Meier |
My New Investing Hero Move over, Warren Buffett. Joel Greenblatt is the new investing idol. Here are four cool things about Joel's portfolio at Gotham Capital: 1. He practices what he preaches... 2. He sticks to his specialties... etc. |
The Motley Fool October 25, 2007 Sham Gad |
Be Greedy When Others Are Fearful The ideas written about in the book Security Analysis more than seventy years ago are just as timely today. Investors, heed this sound advice. |
The Motley Fool August 14, 2008 Bill Mann & Tim Hanson |
Fool Blog: Investment Classics for Short Attention Spans Without further ruminations, delays or obfuscations, we give you the Short Attention Span Investing Book Review. |
The Motley Fool April 7, 2007 John Reeves |
Warren Buffett's Priceless Investment Advice If investing in wonderful companies at fair prices is good enough for Warren Buffett -- arguably the finest investor on the planet -- it should good enough for the rest of us. |
The Motley Fool October 28, 2004 Tom Gardner |
Finding Baseball and Stock Opportunities An interview with "Moneyball" author Michael Lewis about how the stock market for long-term value investors offers substantial pricing inefficiencies. |
InternetNews November 21, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
Dell Finds Small Tweaks Bring Gigantic Savings A little change here, a little there, and suddenly, Dell has spared its customers a collective $3 billion. |
The Motley Fool May 12, 2005 Bill Mann |
What Every Great Investor Must Have Successful investing requires intelligence, knowledge, curiosity, and something else besides money. That's where the discipline comes in. If you can stomach the fact that you will make good decisions but the market will routinely disagree in the short term, you can make a lot of money. |
The Motley Fool December 21, 2005 Bill Mann |
Can a Little Book Beat the Market? Hedge-fund manager Joel Greenblatt's newest release, The Little Book That Beats the Market, is a must-read for investors. |
The Motley Fool March 16, 2006 Rich Smith |
Dueling Fools: Dell Bull Rebuttal Dell's so good, so efficient, and so well known that its reputation and brand name enable it to sell computers at higher prices than others can charge. Dell shareholders then reap the benefits of that pricing power. |
Registered Rep. March 1, 2006 David A. Geracioti |
Who Needs 'Ya? Joel Greenblatt's new book, The Little Book That Beats the Market, is a simple value investing treatise that allows retail investors to create a portfolio based on Gotham Capital's own strategy. And guess what the message is? "You can do it yourself." |
The Motley Fool September 15, 2006 Tim Beyers |
Look Who's Buying Dell! But why do investors like this stock? Here's a reader sample. |