David Merkel | TalkMarkets | Page 1
Founder, Aleph Blog
Contributor's Links: The Aleph Blog Aleph Investments, LLC
David J. Merkel, CFA — 2010-present, I run my own equity asset management shop, called Aleph Investments.  I manage separately managed stock and bond accounts for upper middle class individuals and small institutions.  My minimum is $100,000. From 2008-2010, I was the more

All Contributions

Latest Posts
1 to 16 of 66 Posts
1 2 3 ... 5 >>>
Lagging Long Yields
This post is atypical for me. If you don’t like reading about bonds, Fed Policy, etc., you can skip down to the conclusion which are worth a read.
The No-Lose Line
How long can you hold a Treasury Note or Bond, and not suffer a loss in total return terms, if yields rise from where they are today?
Book Review: Bad Paper
The book follows around debt collectors and those associated with them, a colorful bunch, who see their opportunities flow and ebb as the financial crisis first produces a lot of bad debts to work on.
Problems In Simulating Investment Returns
Simulating hypothetical future investment returns can be important for investors trying to make decisions regarding the riskiness of various investing strategies.
Stay Calm
The differences between the varying wings of the Purple Party are smaller than you think. What’s more, their willingness to magnify those differences and do little as a result is a high probability outcome.
Back To RT Boom/Bust
Two video interviews discussing the rally in long Treasuries, using dividend paying stocks as a bond substitute for income, and a few investment ideas.
Redacted Version Of The October 2014 FOMC Statement
Pretty much a nothing-burger. Few significant changes, if any. Yes, QE ends, but who didn’t expect that?
Book Review: Berkshire Beyond Buffett
It’s time to change what Warren Buffett supposedly said about his mentors: “I’m 85% Ben Graham, and 15% Phil Fisher.”
Waiting To Buy
What if you want to buy a stock that you think is going to rise, but you are waiting for a pullback in order to buy?
Risk Tolerance — The Ability To Deal With Loss
No one knows their financial “risk tolerance” outside of the context of losing money. I’m going to be starting a new irregular series, where I go through my past tax returns and pull out all of the blunders over the past 25 years. I hope it will be instructive to my readers in many ways.
The Butterfly Machine
The economic world is more volatile than a normal distribution because of one complicating factor: people.
Mantra: Interest Rates Have To Rise, Interest Rates Have To…
Why the bond bears are in trouble.
Even With Good Managers, Volatility Matters
Dollar-weighted returns are the returns investors actually receive in a open-end mutual fund or an ETF, which includes their timing decisions, as opposed to the way that performance statistics are ordinarily stated, which assumes that investors buy-and-hold.
Numerator Vs. Denominator
There will always be seemingly anomalous behavior in the markets.
When Will The FOMC Tighten The Fed Funds Rate?
Those betting for tightening in the Fed funds futures market have been losing over the last few years along with those shorting the long Treasury bond, because rates have to go up.
Managing Money For Retirement
Investing reaches its most challenging level when you are relying on your investing to meet an anticipated and repeated need for cash outflows.
1 to 16 of 66 Posts
1 2 3 ... 5 >>>