Joe: Fine, whatever. How about investing? I’m a pretty bad investor, but one time I made this particularly bad investment when I was told I was getting a special bonus that
Below is a word-by-word transcript of an interview with Joe, who insisted on being interviewed as "The Most Fascinating Person in the History of Humanity" but who is anything but.
--I can’t believe I’m doing this This interview is going to be a complete waste of time.
Joe Michael Sasanuma, who earlier today died at the eternal age of 18, never had a moment in which he didn't enjoy life.
He lived by the words "What's the point of living if you can't feel alive?", a line fittingly taken from the James Bond movie "The World is Not Enough". Of the many things
Last week, I learned of a ridiculous fact that Justin Bieber earned $50 million this year. Besides making me think I definitely made a wrong career choice, it got me thinking about what I would do if I had $50 million...
I'll go to Monaco on a $1 million cruise trip and put $2 million on
My investment advice can be summarized one word: valuation. Through painful and expensive lessons in more than a decade of investing, I learned that when you buy “popular” stocks that everyone knows about, you get burned badly because they inevitably become overvalued. It’s the function of the law of supply and demand. When everyone’s buying
During the day, I pretty much do nothing but obsess about my stock portfolio. Over the years, I've had difficulty convincing my friends, including my colleagues who do this kind of work, that investing in the stock market is not akin to gambling. Perhaps the image of my beaming face when I talk about a
Is Apple's stock (AAPL) overvalued? As a person who's been following the stock since the mid 1990s and has owned shares since 2007, let me play devil's advocate.
I think the best advice I can give anyone about stocks is "buy what you understand."
This mnemonic is easily confused with its deceptive cousin "Buy what you know." People--and I used to be one of them--are fond of buying stocks of companies that they "know," usually from using the company's products but sometimes from something
I recently finished reading "The Smartest Guys in the Room," an amazing account of the characters who were complicit in the rise and fall of Enron. It is a page turner; I couldn't put it down.
The authors, Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind, tell a story of how exaggeration, manipulation and obsession with the numbers, particularly
A buddy suggested I write about stocks to increase readership to this blog. Why he thinks this is a winning strategy is beyond me. I wrote about the same kind of stuff in a weekly column called "Strictly Business" 87 times in four years in college but I got more attention the one time I wrote