You rely on The Profit Sector to bring you the most honest and profitable investment advice around. We do that every day. But there are so many fascinating things happening worldwide that we can’t cover it all.
Some of them are revelatory, some of them are practical, and some of them are just plain bizarre.
Here are a few things we discovered this week that were not fit to print.
The Dubious Rise of Imposter Syndrome
Have you ever felt like you’re “faking it”? The concept of Impostor Syndrome has become ubiquitous. Critics, and even the idea’s originators, are questioning its value.
I Used ChatGPT to Write a Resignation Letter. It Was Scary.
OpenAI's ChatGPT has been one of the hot topics of 2023. People have used the AI chatbot to generate lines of code and give investment advice.
One writer used it to draft a resignation letter, but a lawyer said the bot made one crucial error that could have invalidated the whole thing.
How to Delete Yourself From the Internet
With personal data a big issue on the internet, consumers have a legitimate interest in controlling the information flow and reducing the threat of identity theft.
Google recently rolled out a new “Results about you” tool that allows consumers to request the removal of personal data from search results.
Jim Cramer Versus the World
“He presents himself as being the guru on every possible investment, stock, issue, and company, in a way that simply isn’t possible. It makes you ask the question, ‘Has this descended from wisdom into carnival barker?’”
How the Mad Money host went from stock-picking star to the ‘anti-Midas’.
A 150-Year-Old Fund Hasn’t Cut its Dividend Since 1938. Here are the Stocks It Likes.
“It might be easier to list what remains constant rather than what has changed since then, but amongst other things those three Empires and those of Britain and Japan have passed into history, as have the Third Reich and the USSR. There have been two world wars, a cold war, hyperinflation, a depression and numerous financial crashes, and immeasurable human suffering, much of it arising from conflict, famine and disease,” fund managers James Dow and Toby Ross said Friday in presenting its annual results.
Here are the stocks it likes, and the four that it doesn’t.