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02 May 2014

Weekend Reads for Finance Pros: Bubbles, Fama and French, and Executive Brains

Posted In: Weekend Reads

Just as I was getting ready to file this week’s roundup of noteworthy articles and photographs, I spotted a tantalizing tweet:

When I lived in New York City, you see, I walked relentlessly — to work, from work, to grocery stores, restaurants, play grounds, and Central Park. I walked whenever, and wherever, I could. My curiosity piqued, I clicked on the article: interestingly, Steven Strogratz aptly characterizes it as “the pleasures of purposeless walking” compared with the decidedly more downbeat BBC headline: “The Slow Death of Purposeless Walking.” I’m in the pleasures camp.

“There is something about the pace of walking and the pace of thinking that goes together. Walking requires a certain amount of attention but it leaves great parts of the time open to thinking. I do believe once you get the blood flowing through the brain it does start working more creatively,” Geoff Nicholson, author of The Lost Art of Walking, tells the reporter. People should go out and walk free of distractions, he says. “I do think there is something about walking mindfully. To actually be there and be in the moment and concentrate on what you are doing.”

Investing/Behavioral Economics/Trading

Piketty

  • Have you wondered how an economics book written by a French professor — Thomas Piketty’s tome Capital in the Twenty-First Century with 577 pages of text and graphs plus 78 pages of notes — scaled the best-seller lists on Amazon and the New York Times? As with so many things in life, timing is a factor. “Mr. Piketty is by no means the first intellectual to have attained celebrity. But he may be the first to see his ideas — and his headshot — go viral . . . however original Mr. Piketty’s economic argument may be, he is the newest version of a familiar, if not exactly common specimen: the overnight intellectual sensation whose stardom reflects the fashions and feelings of the moment,” Sam Tanenhaus writes in “Hey, Big Thinker.” (New York Times)

Math

Our brains

Suitability vs. Fiduciary Standard

And Now For Something Completely Different

  • After the killing of Osama bin Laden three years ago, Joaquín Guzmán Loera, who was known as El Chapo, or Shorty, became perhaps the most wanted fugitive on the planet. El Chapo, head of the biggest drug-trafficking organization in history, Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, was arrested recently. Here’s how the world’s most notorious drug lord was captured: “The Hunt for El Chapo.” (The New Yorker)
  • Deep inside the US Supreme Court’s decision on affirmative action lies a fight about how we speak about race in America: “What We Talk about When We Talk about Talking about Race.” (Slate)
  • Expressive Black and White Long-Exposure Landscapes” (My Modern Met)

Please note that the content of this site should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute.

Photo credit: ©iStockphoto.com/JLGutierrez

About the Author(s)
Lauren Foster

Lauren Foster was a content director on the professional learning team at CFA Institute and host of the Take 15 Podcast. She is the former managing editor of Enterprising Investor and co-lead of CFA Institute’s Women in Investment Management initiative. Lauren spent nearly a decade on staff at the Financial Times as a reporter and editor based in the New York bureau, followed by freelance writing for Barron’s and the FT. Lauren holds a BA in political science from the University of Cape Town, and an MS in journalism from Columbia University.