Articles Written by:    DAN RICHARDS     

« Previous  |  Next »

Long term should not be a dirty word

F or many Canadians, “long-term investing” is one of the casualties of the market events of the past year. Not long ago, people prided themselves on being long-term investors – of being patient and taking the long view on their investing decisions. They ...

From DAN RICHARDS, Globe and Mail,  23 Nov 2009
Related Topics: Warren Buffett,  John Maynard Keynes,  University of California,  Mao Zedong,  Richard Nixon

Got a big appetite for risk? Then bet against America

D an Richards is president of Strategic Imperatives. He is a faculty member of the MBA program at the Rotman School at the University of Toronto. richards@getkeepclients.com Over a recent lunch with a veteran money manager, he said something that gave ...

From DAN RICHARDS, Globe and Mail,  16 Nov 2009
Related Topics: OPEC,  Wal-Mart,  Warren Buffett,  Burlington Northern,  Google Inc.

Cockiness v. cautious confidence: Why a dollop of humility can work wonders

D an Richards is president of Strategic Imperatives. He is a faculty memeber in the MBA program at the Rotman Schol at the University of Toronto. richards@getkeepclients.com Of all the pitfalls for unwary investors, perhaps none is costlier than the ...

From DAN RICHARDS, Globe and Mail,  9 Nov 2009
Related Topics: New York Times Company,  David Brooks,  Intel,  Andy Grove

Knowing when to get out as important as knowing when to get in

Dan Richards is president of Strategic Imperatives. He is a faculty member in the MBA program at the Rotman School at the University of Toronto. He also hosts a weekly conference call called Monday Morning Jump Start, which is about strategies for ...

From DAN RICHARDS, Globe and Mail,  2 Nov 2009

Are you and your adviser on same wavelength?

D an Richards is president of Strategic Imperatives. He is a faculty member in the MBA program at the Rotman School at the University of Toronto. He also hosts a weekly conference call called Monday Morning Jump Start, which is about strategies for ...

From DAN RICHARDS, Globe and Mail,  27 Oct 2009

Investing with a time machine

T ime travel is every investor's fantasy - imagine if you could go back 40 years and make investment decisions, knowing then what you know now. That's precisely the opportunity I gave a group of investors one recent evening. That morning, I had received ...

From DAN RICHARDS, Globe and Mail,  19 Oct 2009

Lessons from an investing time machine

D an Richards is president of Strategic Imperatives. He is a faculty member in the MBA program at the Rotman School at the University of Toronto. He also hosts a weekly conference call called Monday Morning Jump Start, which is about strategies for ...

From DAN RICHARDS, Globe and Mail,  19 Oct 2009

Institutional wisdom for the individual investor

W hat can Canadians learn from our country's most knowledgeable investors? Recently, I had in-depth conversations with the managers running the money at three of the Canada's largest and most sophisticated pension plans. Over the years, my investor ...

From DAN RICHARDS, Globe and Mail,  12 Oct 2009

Business podcast: are the Tories up to it?

Are the Conservatives' economic policies really any clearer now that George Osborne has delivered his conference speech? Plus, Tesco announces its interim results We're turning the airwaves blue on this week's Business podcast as Aditya Chakrabortty's ...

From ADITYA CHAKRABORTTY, DEBORAH HARGREAVES, HEATHER STEWART, RICHARD WACHMAN, BEN GREEN, DAN ROBERTS, The Observer,  7 Oct 2009
Related Topics: UK Conservative Party,  George Osborne

China's growth a certainty, not the investments

D an Richards is president of Strategic Imperatives. He is a faculty member in the MBA program at the Rotman School at the University of Toronto. richards@getkeepclients.com As an investor, it's hard to avoid being impressed by China's tremendous ...

From DAN RICHARDS, Globe and Mail,  7 Oct 2009
Related Topics: Thomson Reuters

« Previous  |  Next »

Who is This?

Help us add to our database, by linking this writer their entry in Wikipedia or Source Watch, or by suggesting that we remove it from our index.

Suggest an Entry

Enter a url from sourcewatch.org or wikipedia.org:


recommend removal

close