Rally killers
Market condition: volatile bear
"Bear market rallies frustrate the shorts and make the longs feel good. However, when they end, the longs throw in the towel and the shorts return." - Dave Landry
Time to blame the quants?
Bouncing along the bottom?
An economic bestiary
How a modern depression might look
False hopes that recovery is around the corner
People fear that Paul Krugman is right
"History suggests that the second quarter of 2009 could be among the most important periods in financial history." - Doug Wakefield
Bulls get corralled?
The end of excess - is this crisis good for America?
Bankruptcy is economic stimulus
Reviving the shadow banking system
The great flaw in the Geithner plan explained
Q&A with Timothy Geithner
Some banks need large amounts of assistance
Congress is hiding a mountain of debt
Barack Obama as Herbert Hoover?
Government action is unconstitutional
Foreign companies try for stimulus cash
Rampant fraud in SBA program
Popular magazines meet the financial crisis
March winners are actually the biggest losers
Best Buy as a worst-case indicator
A 50% cut in free cash flow
Inflation looms over deflation risk
Do you really understand the perils we face?
The crisis of credit visualized
A simplified story of our economic crisis
Accounting rule change causes trouble for credit-card issuers
Banks are starting to walk away on foreclosures
A home buyer who bought the median priced single-family home at the 1979 peak has actually seen that home lose value
As long as you still have a job, you can now find affordable housing options
Balance sheet problems at homebuilders
An inside look at the culture of credit
Investors look ready to return to the stock market
Are you a stock-market lemming?
Follow the Money
A sentiment overview
Neutral investor sentiment
Ugh, that's a lot of bullish bloggers
Contrarian barometer saw March rally coming
VIX: still the fear index?
S&P 500 tests the 50 day again
Trendlines broken
Recent sector performance
A boom in the Bailout Index
The semiconductor powered rally
Q&A with Jim Rogers
Another profile of George Soros
Barron's interviews Bespoke's Paul Hickey and Justin Walters
Whitney Tilson goes bottom fishing
Want to rebuild your stock portfolio? Start with a BRIC strategy
Obama calls for G20 unity
China v US money market funds
Latin America likely faces worst shock ever
The first bank rescue in Spain
A weekly look at the Foreign Exchange Markets
Did Goldman goose oil?
Hard times mean new opportunities for big oil
John Dorfman reviews six stocks
This week's earnings preview
Large caps with small p/e ratios
The BusinessWeek 50
GM's Wagoner steps aside
AIG crisis could be the tip of an insurance iceberg
Intel is still open to acquisitions, but is wildly overvalued
Lululemon's plan for lean times
Visa deserves some credit
New resources for developing traders
Learning about options
Percentage returns for day traders?
Q&A with Timothy Sykes: Part I, Part II, & Part III
4 ways to think like a winning trader
9 steps to combat the Nirvana fallacy
Weekly TCA-ETF Rankings
Just the stats - ETF rewind
What happens when you hold leveraged ETFs for more than one day?
ETF Time Decay
Two bond ETFs to watch
New socially-responsible ETFs on deck
Diversification works...until it doesn't
Doug Kass on buy and hold investing
"The stock market is not for the average investor. As is the case with Las Vegas gambling, stick with the stock market long enough and it will take your money and leave you chagrined and angry. In my experience, if you deal with the stock market over any length of time, you will end up poorer and more frustrated than when you started." - Richard Russell
Now the long run looks riskier, too
Reader challenge! Can you send me a link of any article you can find online recently published arguing for buy and hold long-term investing?
March Madness money lessons
Buy rental properties with Uncle Sam's cash
Need a new mattress? Here's how to cut through the marketing gimmicks
7 things you're wasting money on
5 free ways to improve your life
"You're walking around blind without a cane, pal. A fool and his money are lucky enough to get together in the first place." - Gordon Gekko
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