2000: Just how rational the markets appear depends on your timeframe. Turn on CNBC and youre faced with an asylum narrated by the Three Stooges. But look at market behavior over a 50-year horizon and youve got a well-manicured lawn, tended by Paul Samuelson and Bill Sharpe. As a practical matter, the more attention you pay to Samuelson and Sharpe and the less to the Three Stooges, the better off you are.
William J. Bernstein, The Expected Return One-Step, Efficient Frontier, Spring 2001,
-
Summon Your Courage and Buy Stocks
Investors who conquer stock-phobia have an edge over those too focused on their rearview mirror By Jason Zweig 2025: Oct. 4, 2008 12:01 am ET During the Great…
Latest articles
-
What’s Luck Got to Do with It?
-

You’re Not Paranoid. The Market Is Out to Get You.
-

Messing Up the Closest Thing to a Sure Thing in the Stock Market
-

What Bill Ackman Got Wrong With His Bungled IPO
-

A Couple Won the Powerball. Investing It Turned Into Tragedy
-

Why Your Fund Manager Can’t Beat Today’s Stock Market
-

Hot Funds and the Curse of ‘Self-Inflated Returns’
-

The Investing Boom That’s Squeezing Some People Dry
-

Thought of the Day
Money in Art, Money in Culture
Books
Jason is the author of “Your Money and Your Brain,” on the neuroscience of investing, and the editor of the revised edition of Benjamin Graham’s “The Intelligent Investor,” the classic text that Warren Buffett has described as “by far the best book about investing ever written.”






