The Dirac Portfolio is, or will be when it is fully populated, an “income” portfolio much like the Hawking portfolio – but with an extended “quiver” of assets (~120) from which to choose. These assets might be Closed-End-Funds (CEFs), Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) or similar
Archives for May 2024
Copernicus Portfolio Review: 13 May 2024
Next to the Schrodinger Intelligent Portfolio the Copernicus is the easiest portfolio to manage as all one needs to do is save and invest in one of several U.S. Equities ETFs. Unless there is an emergency, never sell. This investment management model is specifically designed
Hawking Portfolio Review: 10 May, 2024
Since my last review of the Hawking Portfolio I have added positions in ACRE (Real Estate) and FSK (Business Development Organizations). Both were “falling knives” that I tried to catch, sometimes unsuccessfully (ACRES – that I will say a little more
Kahneman-Tversky Portfolio Review: 10 May, 2024
The Kahneman-Tversky (K-T) Portfolio is a simple Dual Momentum Portfolio using different lookback periods to measure momentum/relative strength in separate portions of the total portfolio. The Portfolio only has a choice of 3 assets from which to choose – VTI (US Equities), VEU (International Equities
Millikan Sector BPI Portfolio Review: 10 May 2024
The Millikan Sector BPI portfolio is a continuation of support for this particular investing model. This review includes nearly 1.5 years of data so it is not the youngest or the oldest Sector BPI portfolio. Historical data is beginning
Rutherford Portfolio Review (Tranche 2): 10 May 2024
It was another bullish week in US equities with stocks ending ~1.8% higher than last week’s close: This resulted in prices closing slightly outside the upper boundary of the tentative downtrend channel
Rutherford Portfolio Review (Tranche 1): 3 May 2024
US equities had another week of positive performance closing the week ~0.7% higher than last week’s close. However, again, it was not a smooth ride with major gains coming on a ~1% gap up on Friday: We are still sitting near the top boundary
“Sell In May And Go Away”
“The exact provenance of the saying ‘Sell in May and go way, don’t come back until St Leger’s Day’ is unclear but a consensus has formed around the idea that it emerged due to stock market traders
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