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22 January 2025
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Highlights of Cuffelinks 2013
In our final edition for 2013, we take a look at our most popular articles among the 400 posts to our website since we commenced on 8 February 2013. Some of these articles have received 10,000 pageviews. Happy Christmas reading.
The Hon Paul Keating on living longer and so should our superannuation.
Chris Cuffe on how to choose the correct investment horizon.
Roger Montgomery on Ben Graham’s three most enduring investing principles plus residential property investment fails a simple valuation test.
Graham Hand on the need to bring ‘industrial strength’ quality to every SMSF, plus watch out for property spruiking targeting SMSFs plus returns to expect from gearing into shares.
Ashley Owen on why he has sold mining stocks after a decade invested, plus his three-part series on investing against the herd plus economic growth does not drive share prices.
David Bell on lifecycle funds as MySuper products plus the variability of retirement outcomes.
Warren Bird on term deposit investors not understanding the risks they were taking.
Jack Gray with an irreverent, irritating, irregular dictionary narrative on ‘c’ words.
Justin Wood on spending guidelines for retirees and endowments.
Peter Kell, Deputy Chairman of ASIC, on FOFA’s five red flags.
Our apologies if we did not list your article as we had literally hundreds to choose from.
Noel, thanks for all your support over 2013, it has certainly increased our readership. We share the same goals of increasing financial literacy and contributing to the quality of debate about good investing. Cheers and happy Christmas.
I would urge you to take out a free subscription to Cuffelinks - they produce a fabulous weekly newsletter. All we can do is keep plugging away at the education process.
Chris, I want to let you know that I have enjoyed reading Cuffelinks during the year. Its my Bus/Ferry reading. Merry Christmas
A pictorial look at how the main developed and emerging stock markets fared in a post-GFC world, with an unfashionable conclusion. Which countries came out on top, and which were best avoided?
Last year, I wrote an article suggesting returns from ASX stocks would trample those from housing over the next decade. One year later, this is an update on how that forecast is going and what's changed since.
The housing market was subdued in 2024, and pessimism abounds as we start the new year. 2025 is likely to be a tale of two halves, with interest rate cuts fuelling a resurgence in buyer demand in the second half of the year.
This examines the performance of key asset classes and sub-sectors in 2024 and over longer timeframes, and the lessons that can be drawn for constructing an investment portfolio for the next decade.
The renowned investor has penned his first investor letter for 2025 and it’s a ripper. He runs through what bubbles are, which ones he’s experienced, and whether today’s markets qualify as the third major bubble of this century.
Key lessons include expensive stocks can always get more expensive, Bitcoin is our tulip mania, follow the smart money, the young are coming with pitchforks on housing, and the importance of staying invested.
Check out the most-read Firstlinks articles from 2024. From '16 ASX stocks to buy and hold forever', to 'The best strategy to build income for life', and 'Where baby boomer wealth will end up', there's something for all.
The outlook for equities in 2025 has been dominated by one question: will the US market's supremacy continue? Whichever side of the debate you sit on, you should challenge yourself by considering the alternative.
Negative gearing allows investors to deduct rental property expenses, including interest, from taxable income, but its tax concession status is debatable. The real issue lies in the favorable tax treatment of capital gains.
Trump's election has turbocharged US equities, but can that outperformance continue? Expensive valuations, rising bond yields, and a potential narrowing of EPS growth versus the rest of the world, are risks.
Untangling assets after a broken relationship can be daunting. But approaching the situation fully informed, in good health and with open communication can make the process more manageable and less costly.
Unlike their peers in the US and UK, policy makers in Australia haven't faced a bond market rebellion in recent times. This could change if current levels of issuance at the state and territory level continue.
Retirement village contracts often require significant upfront payments, with residents losing control over their money. While they may offer a '100% share in capital gain', it's important to look at the numbers before committing.