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Weekend reading: Rats, you missed your chance

Good reads from around the Web.

Since the world’s wealthy [1] are happy to have their funds devoured by the locusts of high-finance – hedge funds and their 2/20% fees – then who knows, maybe they’ll be glad to have their money managed by rats, too?

Enlightenment Economics [2] reports on a curious project to teach rats to trade:

The rats were trained to press a red or green button to give buy or sell signals, after listening to ticker tape movements represented as sounds. If they called the market right they were fed, if they called it wrong they got a small electric shock.

Male and female rats performed equally well. The second generation of rattraders, cross-bred from the best performers in the first generation, appeared to have even better performance, although this is a preliminary result, according to the text.

Marcovici’s plan, he writes, is to breed enough of them to set up a hedge fund.

If you’re thinking you want to get in early – before the best of the rat traders start to demand exorbitant amounts of cheese – you might head to the Rat Traders [3] website to learn more.

Unfortunately you’ll discover that while the idea caught the blogosphere’s imagination this week1 [4], the last updates from the site hail from 2009.

Perhaps the rats were blown-up in the financial crisis? Or maybe they turned to teaching or caring for the elderly or some of the other things we were told [5] financial folk were going to do, having seen the error of their ways.

(Until about 2010, when they started making bazillions again.)

I think somebody should train kittens to trade.

The marketing videos would go viral in a minute!

From the blogs

Making good use of the things that we find…

Passive investing

Active investing

Other articles

Product of the week: Bollywood film maker Eros [21] has launched a retail bond paying 6.5%. This Is Money [22] reminds you of the risks.

Mainstream media money

Some links are Google search results – in PC/desktop view these enable you to click through to read the piece without being a paid subscriber of that site.2 [23]

Passive investing

Active investing

Other stuff worth reading

Book of the week: I first started seriously reading Martin Wolf’s financial journalism in the depths of the financial crisis. The FT writer’s professorial tone, rationality, and concern for wider humanity shone through and reassured me even when he was predicting doom like everyone else (rightly enough at times). Wolf’s new book about the past few years, The Shifts and the Shocks [38], is surely a must-read.

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  1. Thanks to Monevator reader G. for putting me on the trail. [ [43]]
  2. Reader Ken notes that: “FT articles can only be accessed through the search results if you’re using PC/desktop view (from mobile/tablet view they bring up the firewall/subscription page). To circumvent, switch your mobile browser to use the desktop view. On Chrome for Android: press the menu button followed by “Request Desktop Site”.” [ [44]]