Featured and Latest Posts
Is Day Trading Stocks a Viable Strategy?
Day trading is often seen as a fast-paced path to financial freedom, but the reality is far more challenging—especially when factoring in trading costs. In the UK, the absence of a pattern day trader rule makes entry easier, yet most traders still lose money over time. Drawing on studies from the US, UK, and Taiwan, this post explores why only a small fraction of day traders manage to stay profitable after costs. Discover the skills, risks, and psychological resilience required to beat the odds, and why the allure of quick profits often masks a grueling reality.
Why Picking Individual Stocks Is Not a Good Idea
Stock picking has long been romanticised — whether it’s a charismatic CEO on the cover of Fortune, Reddit-fuelled mania, or a tip from a friend who ‘got in early’. But despite the allure, the evidence is clear: picking individual stocks and consistently outperforming a given index is near impossible.
Here’s why the rational investor avoids it.
Passive in Name Only? Why ‘Passive’ Funds Might Not Be So Passive After All
In theory, passive investing is simple: track the market, minimise costs, and remove human judgement. But in practice, things aren’t so clear-cut. From index selection and portfolio construction to fee differences and persistent return gaps, many so-called passive funds involve more active decisions than most investors realise. This post explores the blurred line between active and passive — and why understanding that distinction could make a big difference to your long-term returns.
How Often Should You Rebalance Your Portfolio?
How often should you rebalance your portfolio? While many investors treat rebalancing as routine, research by Jeremy Siegel suggests that leaving portfolios untouched—particularly when it comes to broad indices like the S&P 500—can actually lead to superior long-term returns. This post explores the trade-off between managing risk and letting winners run, and asks whether doing less might sometimes achieve more.
Good financial decisions aren’t about predicting the future—they’re about following a sound process today.
In investing, outcomes are noisy. Short-term performance often reflects randomness, not skill. Yet fund managers continue to pitch five-year track records as if they prove anything. They don’t.
As Ken French puts it, a five-year chart ‘tells you nothing’. The real skill lies in filtering out the noise—evaluating strategy, incentives, costs, and behavioural fit.
Don’t chase what worked recently. Stick with what works reliably.