Thinking hard on thinking long If long-term investing is to be encouraged, then policies need to support it Oliver Bäte © Jenny van Sommers Thinking hard on thinking long If long-term investing is to be encouraged, then policies need to support it Oliver Bäte Related articles Related articles Message from the hunter-gatherer Long-term thinking might not be humanity’s strongest trait. But while investments for the long-run are often praised, they are not a cure-all Return of the bull Not all of investing’s cherished truths have disappeared. Stocks for the long run remain a reliable source of adequate pensions, argues Jeremy Siegel Ricardo Hausmann: Why we weaken our teams in soccer and economics Now that Europe has a new soccer champion, it is time to learn some economic lessons from this diverse EURO. Empathizing with other humans is a subroutine of the brain, but Hausmann points to ever larger social groups in a globalized world as one reason for Brexit and the rise of mini national teams “Safe” bonds may be riskier than equities over the long term There’s a strong belief in the investment community that highly rated government bonds are safer than equities. But is that completely justified, and does it define risk too narrowly?
Message from the hunter-gatherer Long-term thinking might not be humanity’s strongest trait. But while investments for the long-run are often praised, they are not a cure-all
Return of the bull Not all of investing’s cherished truths have disappeared. Stocks for the long run remain a reliable source of adequate pensions, argues Jeremy Siegel
Ricardo Hausmann: Why we weaken our teams in soccer and economics Now that Europe has a new soccer champion, it is time to learn some economic lessons from this diverse EURO. Empathizing with other humans is a subroutine of the brain, but Hausmann points to ever larger social groups in a globalized world as one reason for Brexit and the rise of mini national teams
“Safe” bonds may be riskier than equities over the long term There’s a strong belief in the investment community that highly rated government bonds are safer than equities. But is that completely justified, and does it define risk too narrowly?