Whether it comes from over swiping a credit card, not investing early enough, cashing out a 401(k), or buying a house or a car we can’t afford, regret comes from decisions in our past that we feel define us in some way. The thing about regret is that it can affect us so deeply if we do not know how to move past it.
Thomas Kopelman
In a sense, bored, confused, and lonely are the long-term investor’s resting state. And in that, hopefully some of us can find community and comfort
Jeffrey Ptak
Personal finance
Bored, Lonely, and Confused: Why It’s OK to Feel Lousy While Investing
Investing By Age Series: Investing In Your 20s
The trap of lifestyle inflation is real.
Investing
Baillie Gifford’s never-sell mantra is a song for fools
The Most Powerful Artificial Intelligence Knows Nothing About Investing. That’s Perfectly Okay.
Markets
These are the kinds of charlatans who show up when Wall Street gets weird
Demystifying payment for order flow
Brain stuff
The Base Rate Is A Hell of A Thing
Research
Who Feels the Nudge? Knowledge, Self-Awareness and Retirement Savings Decisions
Technology
How Google Will Target Ads Without Singling Users Out
Randomness
The 25 Greatest Art Heists of All Time