My interview with Jim Rogers
Wednesday, July 6, 2016
WSJ: The Big Interview With Jim Rogers
My interview with Jim Rogers
Tuesday, July 5, 2016
WSJ: The Big Interview With Nouriel Roubini
In which I interview Nouriel Roubini about the economy.
Forbes: More Brexit Lies Dispelled
By SIMON CONSTABLE
It’s not surprising that most people are averse to change. But some of the worries people have about Britain leaving the European Union are wildly pessimistic. They paint a world so gloomy that even fantasy writers would have a hard time selling these ideas to publishers. The level of gloom simply wouldn’t be seen as realistic enough.
For instance, in a coffee shop one morning a young Frenchman asked me (I’m English) if he’d be able to visit Britain after the so-called Brexit (Britain’s exit from the E.U.). Read more here.
Forbes: How Wall Street Really Invests
U.S. News: How to Save $10,000 in 6 Months
WSJ: Investors Expand Their Appetite for Commodities
WSJ: What Do Chart Gaps Mean for Investors?
By SIMON CONSTABLE
Some investors watch for “gaps” on daily stock-price charts as meaningful signs of future price moves. What exactly are they?
Stock charts show vertical bars with opening, high, low and closing prices. Most of the time, the price ranges overlap from one day to the next, but sometimes—say, a stock opens higher than the previous day’s trading range and stays there—there will be a gap, or empty space on the chart where no trading occurred. Technical analysts see some gaps as harbingers of a change in trends. Here are two key types: