
What I'm reading this morning:
- Several central banks have tried raising rates in the post-crisis period only to reverse course soon after (Wall Street Journal)
- 25 years of monetary policy shifts, in brief (Fundamentalis)
- Barron's essentially called Alibaba a fraud this weekend. The company's refutation was epic (Alizila)
- Why the bulls may have to struggle with "overhead supply" (TRB)
- Jeff Gundlach: Here's what everyone gets wrong (ETF.com)
- Are Federal Reserve officials more likely to be hawkish if their formative experience included high inflation? (Upshot)
- Famous hedge funds have figured out a way to leverage the impact their public filings generate (Global Slant)
- Google brings in a driverless car chief (Wall Street Journal)
- 50-year Wall Street veteran Joe Rosenberg: The next 15 years should be great for stocks (Barron's)
- Human traders can still beat computers (Financial Times)
- Approximately 30 percent of new hedge funds don’t make it past 36 months due to poor performance. Almost half of all hedge funds never reach their fifth anniversary. (ETF.com)
- $100 million Russian palace for sale on Long Island's North Shore (Luxury Listings NYC)