So few market winners, so much dead weight
Research by Professor of Finance Hendrik Bessembinder covered in The New York Times receives a response from Bloomberg
In a response to an article in The New York Times titled"The Best Investment Since 1926? Apple," in which Professor of Finance Hendrik Bessembinder's research illustrated how dominant Apple's stocks have been since the beginning of the 20th century; Bloomberganalyzed Bessembinder's findings and found that nearly four percent of publicly traded stocks account for the net wealth earned by investors since 1926.
In this post in Bloomberg on Sept. 26, 2017:
"A mere 30 stocks account for 30 percent of the net wealth generated by stocks in that long period, and 50 stocks account for 40 percent of the net wealth."
Latest news
- Innovation, community, and career relevance at ASU stand out for master’s in accounting alum Jack Logsdon
Jack Logsdon (MACC '24) came to W. P.
- Hands-on real estate learning helps MBA students make an impact
Recent graduate Carson Thrift (MBA '25) applied skills from his Full-…
- Master's in finance program helps Adam Ray find confidence, purpose in career
Adam Ray (MS-FIN '25) chose to stay at W. P.