Toronto Basketball, the Warriors, Rodman, Giannis, and the Secret Covid Outbreak

Thursday morning news drop

  • Toronto Is Canada’s Basketball Centre, but You Can’t Always See That in Its Courts Thanks to the Raptors, basketball has never been so popular. But the lack of high-quality facilities tells a troubling story (Walrus)

  • The Warriors Got Back on Top by Evolving Their Title-Winning Template Teams across the NBA emulated Golden State’s style after its five-Finals run. After taking two seasons to reload, the Warriors now look like an even better version of their original blueprint. (Ringer)

  • Dennis Rodman, Bad Boy for Life He’s had a Hall of Fame career in the NBA, where he pushed buttons and fashioned himself into a gender-exploding rock star. (And collected five rings, too.) But when you peel away the attitude, and the hair, and the piercings and tattoos, who is Dennis Rodman underneath it all? (GQ)

  • Why Giannis Antetokounmpo Chose the Path of Most Resistance His fairy-tale rise made him a sensation. But now, after turning the once-dismal Bucks into champions, he’s becoming something more like a legend. Inside the whirlwind next chapter for the NBA’s most dazzling global star—who’s deciding what he intends to conquer next. (GQ)’

  • The Secret Covid Outbreak That Shot Fear Through the NBA Finals 17 sources describe to Rolling Stone a coronavirus crisis pushing pro basketball to the brink: Upwards of a dozen people associated with the Milwaukee Bucks and Phoenix Suns tested positive — and a superstar “dodged a bullet” (Rolling Stone)

  • How Americans’ Appetite for Leather in Luxury SUVs Worsens Amazon Deforestation An examination of Brazil’s immense tannery industry shows how hides from illegally deforested ranches can easily reach the global marketplace. In the United States, much of the demand for Brazilian leather comes from automakers. (New York Times)

  • Connecting the dots between B.C.’s floods, landslides and the clearcut logging of old forests Deforestation dramatically alters how landscapes are able to cope with extreme weather events like the atmospheric river that surged across southern British Columbia earlier this week (Narwhal)

  • A month of inflation does not a crisis make Don’t throw away the best economic opportunity in 20 years for panic and austerity (The Week)

  • The Fed Has More Options Than 0% Rates or Recession It’s a scary situation if there’s no middle ground on policy for the world’s most powerful central bank. (Bloomberg)

  • The Untold Story of Von Dutch Behind the brand that made trucker hats hot in the early 2000s is a messy corporate origin tale, filled with sabotage and greed. (New York Times)

  • Check: Solving the $150 Billion Payroll Problem Check has the potential to become payroll's "platform of platforms." (Generalist)

Highway Closures, BC Climate Extremes, and Basketball's Sharpshooters

Wednesday morning news drop

  • Trucking industry working to get around catastrophic B.C. highway closures The 4 highway links between the Lower Mainland and B.C.'s Interior are closed, rattling supply chains. (CBC)

  • First fire, now floods: Why B.C. is trapped in a world of climate extremes Extreme weather events are connected: With heat comes wildfires, and with wildfires come changes to the soil that can exacerbate the effects of heavy rainfall (Globe and Mail)

  • Chandos Construction vows to be Net Zero by 2040 The Contractor has initiated a massive carbon reduction plan. Chandos president Tim Coldwell says his life philosophy, involving service to others, fits in well with his role with the company, which sees him working as part of a team towards higher goals. “It’s good for Chandos because it leads to differentiation, growth and opportunity for our employee owners,” he says. (Daily Commercial News)

  • Why Health-Care Workers Are Quitting in Droves About one in five health-care workers has left medicine since the pandemic started. This is their story—and the story of those left behind. (The Atlantic)

  • Investors Know They Own Too Much Tech. This Analysis Shows That It’s Worse Than They Think. An alternative way of looking at market-cap weighted index funds shows that investor exposure to the sector is higher than it was during the tech bubble. (Institutional Investor)

  • Investors Hung Their Hats on Peloton and Zoom Last Year. What Now? Some “stay-at-home” stocks that were pandemic-era darlings have experienced brutal sell-offs. (New York Times)

  • Singapore’s tech-utopia dream is turning into a surveillance state nightmare In the "smart nation," robot dogs enforce social distancing and an app can claim to neutralize racism. The reality is very different. (Rest of World)

  • The Case for Patience on Inflation: A close read of the data so far suggests that the current price pressure is still confined to the same batch of idiosyncratic sectors that have been driving inflation all year. Moreover, measures of actual consumer behavior suggest that Americans are responding to higher prices not by hoarding in anticipation of even more inflation, but by postponing their spending in the expectation that affordability will improve. (The Overshoot)

  • Stephen Curry’s Scientific Quest for the Perfect Shot The NBA’s best shooter decided the basket was too big. He used technology to make it smaller. The goal: ‘swishes within swishes.’ (Wall Street Journal)

  • Kevin Durant Can Score From Anywhere. Defenses Don’t Know What to Do. The midrange game has largely fallen out of favor in the N.B.A., but not when Durant is on the court. (New York Times)

  • Why Skyfall is a masterclass in cinematography. It’s a credit to his photographic and cinematographic skills that it isn’t always about adjusting the image later but getting it correct in camera. Photographers take note, even when shooting James Bond, it comes down to the basics: good lighting, composition, knowledge of ISO, exposures, apertures and colour. (Kat Clay)

The Great Resignation, Real Estate, Crypto, and Amazon’s Spinmasters

Tuesday morning news drop

  • The number of U.S. workers quitting their jobs in September was the highest on record. More than 4.4 million workers quit their jobs voluntarily in September, the Labor Department said Friday. That was up from 4.3 million in August and was the most in the two decades the government has been keeping track. Nearly a million quit their jobs in the leisure and hospitality industry alone. (NYT)

  • Will Real Estate Ever Be Normal Again? In Austin, Texas, and cities around the country, prices are skyrocketing, forcing regular people to act like speculators. When will it end? (New York Times)

  • How many homes do we need? It’s surprisingly difficult to answer the question of how much construction is enough. Most people (including past me) naively plot homes constructed next to population growth and conclude they’re a good match. Of course that ignores that these variables are closely linked, and people can’t come if there are no homes for them. From an economics standpoint, it ignores the huge price signal in the form of rapidly rising resale prices and rents which indicate that demand is outpacing supply. (House Hunt Victoria)

  • Four Things That Will Keep You Out of the Stock Market If everything in the grocery store was on sale for 30% off you wouldn’t turn around and say “I don’t trust this, I’m going to come back when the prices are much higher.” People would think you’re insane. So why is it ok when it comes to our money? If you truly want to put your dollars to work, employ them when unemployment is high. (Wealth Found Me)

  • The Crypto Capital of the World It has to be somewhere. Why not Ukraine? The anything-goes ethos has dogged Ukraine for years, and now the government is hoping to bury it, with an assist from cryptocurrency. In early September, the Parliament here passed a law legalizing and regulating Bitcoin, step one in an ambitious campaign to both mainstream the nation’s thriving trade in crypto and to rebrand the entire country. (New York Times)

  • Who Goes Crypto? In the era of financial precarity, betting on meme stocks to save for retirement might not be moral, but it’s certainly rational. (Mother Jones)

  • Vizio makes more money spying on people who buy TVs than it does on TVs themselves Time and again, we learn that companies spy on you whenever it suits them even companies that make a lot of noise about how they don’t need to spy on you to make money. If a company has power because of lock-in and if the company can make money by abusing you, it will abuse you. (Pluralistic)

  • Amazon’s Spinmasters: Behind the Internet Giant’s Battle With the Press There was a time when Jeff Bezos barely cared about public relations. But after years of increasingly hostile media coverage and growing public scrutiny of Amazon, the company has gone on the offensive against journalists. It even measures its PR team on the corrections they get on stories. (The Information)

  • Know How the Beatles Ended? Peter Jackson May Change Your Mind. The director’s three-part documentary “Get Back” explores the most contested period in the band’s history and reveals there’s still plenty to debate. (New York Times)

Victoria's Budget, E-Bikes, Supply Chain Crisis, and Organic Food

Monday morning news drop

  • Comment: Victoria's budget for 2022 sets the table for the future Here are some of the requests Victoria council is considering (Times Colonist)

  • E-Bike Vigilantes Mount Up With a global boom in electric bikes and a corresponding increase in theft, writing off the losses isn’t the only option. (Bloomberg)

  • Business Schools Respond to a Flood of Interest in E.S.G. As the number of jobs focused on environmental, social and governance issues grows, M.B.A. programs are updating their courses to meet demand from students and recruiters. (New York Times)

  • Organized crime 'knowingly and actively' exploited federal pandemic benefits: intelligence reports FINTRAC not sure total amount of CERB/CEBA funds may have gone to organized crime (CBC)

  • Advisers share the lessons you should be teaching your children about money Take these crucial steps to prepare the next generation for financial responsibility and future wealth (Financial Post)

  • Employees and their workplaces set to face surge in payroll taxes in 2022 Payroll taxes are set to surge next year as the pandemic economy’s dynamics amplify the costs for companies and their employees for the Canada Pension Plan and Employment Insurance. (Globe and Mail)

  • Packed ports and empty shelves: Inside the issues behind the U.S. supply chain crisis 60 Minutes follows the U.S.'s struggling supply chain, from choked ports on the West Coast, to packed rail yards in Chicago. Along the way, we found finger-pointing, huge profits, and massive losses. (60 Minutes)

  • The Great Organic-Food Fraud There’s no way to confirm that a crop was grown organically. Randy Constant exploited our trust in the labels—and made a fortune. (New Yorker)

  • The Power Grid Is Just Another Casino for Energy Traders When GreenHat Energy collapsed after blowing millions speculating on power prices, it became plain: Energy traders are essentially gambling, and ratepayers back every bet. (Businessweek)

  • The Untold Story of Sushi in America In the beginning, it was a simpler time — 1980, when few Americans knew the meanings of toro and omakase — and there was only the Rev. Sun Myung Moon, the founder of the Unification Church, speaking to dozens of his followers in the Grand Ballroom of the New Yorker Hotel. In the beginning, God did not create a sushi company. The sushi came later. So did the unraveling of a controversial religion and the lawsuit for control of its mysterious assets. (New York Times)

  • Chevy Chase is 74, sober and ready to work. The problem? Nobody wants to work with him. The 74-year-old comedy star is sober and ready to work. The problem is nobody wants to work with him (Washington Post)

  • On Podcasts and Radio, Misleading Covid-19 Talk Goes Unchecked: False statements about vaccines have spread on the “Wild West” of media, even as some hosts die of virus complications. (New York Times)

  • Aaron Rodgers Didn’t Just Lie: His lies, his illogical defense, and his hubris damage all professional athletes. The pandemic has revealed several athletes who abuse their position and responsibility, not just to the public, but to other professional athletes’ livelihood (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar)

  • What happened to Eric Clapton? The guitar legend has long been inscrutable, but his covid turn has friends and fans puzzled like never before. (Washington Post)

  • Half-century old, unseen footage shows Beatles writing and recording in new documentary "Get Back" Hours of unseen footage of the Beatles' writing and recording are being released after 50 years, part of Peter Jackson's new documentary, "Get Back." (60 Minutes)

Videos of the Week, Psychedelics, Military Violence, and Investing Against Inflation

Friday morning news drop

  • Will the magic of psychedelics transform psychiatry? Psychedelics have come a long way since their hallucinogenic hippy heyday. Research shows that they could alleviate PTSD, depression and addiction. So will we all soon be treated with magic mushrooms and MDMA? (The Guardian)

  • The Billion Dollar Question Why can’t the military fix its violence against women problem? Congress is on the precipice of ushering in the biggest shift in military policy since the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. But would it have saved 21-year-old airman Natasha Aposhian? (Elle)

  • Brookfield CEO says private credit is replacing fixed income for investors Brookfield CEO Bruce Flatt says the growing world of private lending is replacing traditional fixed-income investments as the asset category of choice for investors looking for returns in a low-interest-rate world. (Globe and Mail)

  • Which Asset Classes Perform Best During Inflation? To start, let’s look at the inflation-adjusted (“real”) annual returns of nine different asset classes from 1976-2019 (the data comes from BullionVault). Note that I capped all real returns at 20% (-20%) so that we could better visualize the performance behavior of these different asset classes: (Of Dollars And Data)

  • Hunt for Hottest Tickers Creates a New Gray Market on Wall Street Strong fund names have been shown to boost trading in U.S. stocks, and the day-trader invasion is making them key to new ETF success (Bloomberg)

  • Tesla Had 5 Founders. Why Did Only Two Get Really Rich? One is Elon Musk (duh), and the other is JB Straubel. But there were three more—and there’s a cautionary tale in why they aren’t billionaires too. (Forbes)

  • Canada's unhinged housing market, captured in one chart Canada’s rate of housing prices increase has given rise to a new economic term to describe the market: ‘shelter inflation' (National Post)

Videos of the Week

Connor McDavid Scores the Goal of the Year 🔥 The greatest hockey player of this generation never ceases to amaze.

Dustbox Dreamcastle With one collective obsession, and the bonds of friendship at our side, we have created a snapshot of the feeling that we hold oh so dear to us, and now offer to you. This crew is the future of snowboarding.

A Basils Video Pt.3 - Liam Baylis A mountain bike video that showcases some of my favourite sessions with my buddies in 2021. Cheers to the homies for filming and for being dope!

Inbound - Brendan Howey x Rupert Walker: Inbound showcases Brendan Howey’s impeccable riding style and Rupert Walker’s intricate cuts and attention to detail.

Markus Eder's The Ultimate Run - The Most Insane Ski Run Ever Imagine Sometimes my mind goes kind of crazy about skiing and I ask myself, what if...?” - Markus Eder What if you could link every powder turn, every rail, every cliff drop, every comp run and every kicker nailed into one ultimate run? Well, Markus Eder did just that in ‘The Ultimate Run’!. This is Markus’ Opus Magnum, a medley of face shots, massive tricks and even bigger drops, which was documented by Innsbruck based production company Legs of Steel over the past two years. Markus has been visualizing the ultimate run since 2015. It may look like a simple undertaking in the final edit, but for arguably the most versatile skier on the planet, it meant taking his skill levels in every form and style of contemporary freeskiing to the next level.

Mark Suciu's "Curve" Habitat Part Hot on the heels of his Blue Dog part, Mark sets his sights on the Rust Belt's crusty spots and overlooked streets. That ender’s a killer combo.

Inflation, Value Stocks, Vintage Cars, and Dollar Stores

Thursday morning news drop

  • The history of the poppy — a symbol of remembrance for 100 years 'It's a living symbol, it grows and it takes on new meaning with each generation of Canadians and also the wars we fight in as Canadians in the search for peace' (National Post)

  • Wages Are Heading Up, But They’re Not Pushing Inflation The pay increase is nice, but it will have to be a lot higher before it contributes meaningfully to faster price growth. (Bloomberg)

  • Bitcoin and Inflation “There are several plausible explanations for why bitcoin doubled this year. Inflation is probably one of them.” (Irrelevant Investor)

  • What Are the Best Value Stocks—and the Ones to Shun? Northern Trust screens for the top of the class, and also to red-flag the less appealing bargain plays. (Chief Investment Officer)

  • In the supply chain battle of 2021, small businesses are losing out to Walmart and Amazon Independent retailers are getting squeezed out as suppliers, factories and freight companies prioritize national brands: ‘We’re at the whim of a broken supply chain.’ (Washington Post)

  • Vintage cars are chic again Enthusiasm for vintage cars has emerged at a time when microchip shortages have fueled bidding wars for new and used contemporary vehicles. (Axios)

  • The Truth About Those Dollar Stores: Dollar General, Dollar Tree, Family Dollar, and others offer low prices but also raise concern in communities that feel choked by them (Consumer Reports)

  • Yuval Noah Harari Believes This Simple Story Can Save the Planet Many of the philosophical questions that have bothered humanity for thousands of years are now becoming practical. It’s the primacy of fictions, that to understand the world you need to take stories seriously. The story in which you believe shapes the society that you create. (New York Times)

  • Angry about ‘The Last Dance,’ Scottie Pippen keeps taking shots at Michael Jordan Pippen’s unsparing assessments of Jordan may come as a surprise to those who assumed the longtime teammates were on friendly terms. They formed a dominant duo for most of 11 highly successful seasons in Chicago, and their half-dozen championship runs provided endless scenes of them hugging in jubilation. (Washington Post)

Labour Shortages, Supply Chain Issues, and Downfall of General Electric

Wednesday morning news drop

  • The labour shortage is so bad businesses are eyeing mergers to acquire new talent Close to 116,000 small businesses will be up for sale in the next five years. From being the victims of complete shutdowns, to financing challenges to poor business flows, companies have weathered it all over the past 24 months. And now they are facing labour shortages as a post-pandemic recovery takes hold. (Financial Post)

  • Alberta posts highest construction levels in years, but supply chain woes impede projects Home-building disruptions trigger higher costs, delays and frustration (CBC)

  • Charting GE’s Historic Rise and Tortured Downfall General Electric Co. has unraveled. The onetime icon of American industry suffered its biggest annual stock decline of the modern era as it was booted from the Dow Jones Industrial Average. (Bloomberg)

  • Reddit’s Latest Money-Making Obsession Is an Obscure Fed Facility Huge, oft-misunderstood program turns into another avenue for GameStop daydreams (Bloomberg)

  • Will the Guitar Boom Outlast COVID? Stay at home orders drove record guitar sales, but what happens when the pandemic subsides and life returns to normal? (Music Trades)

  • The Chip That Could Transform Computing The M1 chips make laptops as powerful as some of the fastest desktops on the market yet so efficient that their battery life beats that of just about any other laptop. The chips portend a future absolutely saturated with computing power — with extremely powerful processors not just in traditional computers and smartphones but also in cars, drones, virtual-reality machines and pretty much everything else that runs on electricity. (New York Times)

  • We Already Have the Tools We Need to Beat Climate Change The challenge is not identifying the solutions, but rolling them out with great speed. (Slate)

Winners Never Quit Unless They Want a Bigger Salary

Tuesday morning news drop

  • Winners never quit — unless they want to see a bigger salary increase. Research has found that “Quitters” earned higher percentage wage gains than those who stayed in their existing jobs. The average salary boost employees receive when changing jobs is between 10 per cent and 20 per cent, according to Forbes. Regardless of the absolute level, the underlying is sound: Employers looking to hire have had to raise salaries to attract workers. This not only leads to job switching within a given industry but has also led to career changes, as workers upskill and switch fields to have more lucrative careers. This also explains in part why so many low-skill, low-wage positions have gone unfilled. Whether they're looking for a change for better quality of life or pay, job seekers in Canada appear to have the upper hand amid the labour shortage seen in the country. (Global News)

  • The Great Resignation has employers sweating. It’s time to escalate the pressure This is a once-in-a-generation ‘take this job and shove it’ moment – which gives workers an upper hand. Let’s demand better hours, pay and work-life balance (Guardian)

  • Make Learning a Part of Your Daily Routine In our increasingly “squiggly” careers, where people change roles more frequently and fluidly and develop in different directions, the ability to unlearn, learn, and relearn is vital for long-term success. It helps us increase our readiness for the opportunities that change presents and our resilience to the inevitable challenges we’ll experience along the way. Adaptive and proactive learners are highly prized assets for organizations, and investing in learning creates long-term dividends for our career development. Based on their experience designing and delivering career development training for over 50,000 people worldwide, the authors present several techniques and tools to help you make learning part of your day-to-day development. (Harvard Business Review)

  • Porch Cameras and Facebook Groups Are Turning Streets into Surveillance States Our tech-driven approach to neighbourhood watch is cementing community divisions (Walrus)

  • How to Think About the Covid Recession This was a recession like no other in recent memory. The pandemic downturn was driven by all those industries that are supposed to be recession-proof — trips to the dentist, electricity usage in offices and malls, and so on. And the normally countercyclical education sector had big enrollment drops despite the bad economy. (New York Times)

  • The timing of the next global depression is getting closer than you think John De Goey: We will be in for a world of hurt as soon as government deleveraging begins (Financial Post)

  • The Intrinsic Futility of ES(G) Investing As predicted by financial theory, stocks of companies with positive environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) records underperformed the market. But the problems for ESG investors don’t stop there. Worst of all, ESG funds underperformed the non-ESG funds run by the same managers. (Advisor Perspectives)

  • Shipping is broken. Here’s how to fix it. Holiday season shipping is making supply chain problems worse, but there’s hope for next year. (Recode)

  • We chartered a boat with a logistics expert to look at port congestion up close and saw how American greed is leading to shortages and empty shelves The Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach are on the frontlines of the shipping crisis. Container ships sit anchored on the coast, with some waiting since late August to dock. (Yahoo)

The Bond Market, Masai Ujiri on Building Teams, and Cities Underwater

Monday morning news drop

  • How Masai Ujiri Builds a Team The acclaimed N.B.A. executive on trading players, experiencing injustice, and going home. (New Yorker)

  • An influx of French immigrants to Quebec highlights a cultural shift ... and rift Drawn by a cultural and economic openness they can’t find at home, many young French people have fallen in love with Quebec. (Globe and Mail)

  • 9 cities that could be underwater by 2030 With sea levels rising worldwide, several major metropolises are at risk of being submerged (Time Out)

  • Why Facebook Is More Worried About Europe Than the U.S. Unlike the ongoing partisan divide in Washington over regulating social media, politicians in the European Union and United Kingdom are already on the same page and they are about to make Facebook do something it has long tried to avoid: take legal responsibility for content.(Politico)

  • Here’s Why Rapid COVID Tests Are So Expensive and Hard to Find Months-long silences. Mysterious rejections. Here’s what’s behind the shortages of a critical tool for ending the pandemic. (ProPublica)

  • Meat Prices Will Continue to Surge If Meatpackers Can’t Find Workers Fast Recruiting is only getting harder for a U.S. industry that demands grueling work and has the taint of deadly Covid outbreaks. (Bloomberg)

  • How American leaders failed to help workers survive the ‘China Shock’ It was not a surprise to economists that China, with its endless supply of cheap labor, killed American manufacturing jobs. But most economists, like most American leaders, had believed that workers would adapt. Standard economic theory said that the non-college-educated workers who lost their jobs would move or retrain and find work in other places or sectors. But they didn’t. Most stayed put and were never fully employed again. (NPR)

  • All Those 23andMe Spit Tests Were Part of a Bigger Plan CEO Anne Wojcicki wants to make drugs using insights from millions of customer DNA samples, and doesn’t think that should bother anyone. (Businessweek)

  • Rivian: The Most Remarkable Adventure: A Deep Dive Into the 12-year-old, Amazon-backed, EV Adventure Company Rivian’s IPO will be one of the biggest and most hotly-anticipated of the year. SoFi will have no trouble finding buyers to fill its allocation. But this is the very early innings of a transition in which retail investors will hopefully get more and more access to IPO shares in the best deals. Companies are often nervous about retail investors, though. They’re worried we’re less likely to hold shares and more likely to sell on a pop. In order for retail to get more direct access, we need to not fuck it up. That means understanding what we’re buying, or not, and why. Knowledge makes the diamond hands. (Not Boring)

  • Is Bitcoin Too Big to Fail? The hand-wringing has been at its fiercest over Bitcoin’s possible exposure to systemic risk, both existential and otherwise. Chief among those concerns is whether a crypto crash, taking place in what is effectively a parallel, decentralized financial universe, might spill over into the traditional financial system. The fact that so many exchanges and crypto intermediaries remain offshore and unregulated continues to fan fears. (Institutional Investor)

  • How to Dabble Safely in the Bubble of Cryptos, NFTs, and Meme Stocks. This isn’t a valuation screed—not solely, at least. The world doesn’t need another asset-allocation traditionalist carrying on about Bitcoin not having cash flows. This is a hopeful note for ordinary savers and investors who no longer recognize their surroundings—who see abstract things selling for startling prices and wonder, on one hand, whether that’s dangerous for stocks, bonds, and traditional money, and, on the other, whether it’s too late to grab a stake in some new, fun, potential moon rocket. (Barron’s)

  • This year is shaping up as the worst ever for bond ETFs, but there are some bright spots So when we say the current year is shaping up as the worst ever for exchange-traded funds holding bonds, it means something.

    Year-to-date declines for these funds are minor league by the standards of the stock market. But if you regard bonds as a safe investment, the events of 2021 have to be unnerving. Bonds remain the best way for the everyday investor to shield a portfolio from the worst of a stock market crash. But bonds can bite at times like now, as financial markets worry that interest rates will snap back from their pandemic lows harder and faster than expected.

    The anticipation of rising rates causes some investors to sell the bonds they already own, thereby pushing bond prices lower. Yields move in the opposite direction of bond prices, which explains why yields have moved sharply higher this year. If you put new money into bonds today, you’ll get a better yield than a year ago.

    Short-term bond ETFs are one way to limit your portfolio’s vulnerability to rising rates. Check out the iShares Core Canadian Short Term Bond Index ETF (XSB) – it was down only 1.6 per cent on a total return basis for the first 10 months of the year.

    Corporate bonds are another possibility for the ETF investor looking to tweak a portfolio to address vulnerability to rising rates. In a rising rate world, expect them to fall less in price than government bonds. The performance this year of the Vanguard Canadian Corporate Bond Index ETF (VCB) backs this up – the fund was down 3.1 per cent, about two percentage points less than VAB, with its hefty weighting in government bonds.

    Floating rate bond ETFs have eked out tiny gains this year, which is something of a win in present conditions. These funds hold bonds that adjust their interest payments to reflect what’s happening with interest rates. Note the paper-thin yield from these bonds.

    Much better results were produced by high-yield bonds, which hold bonds issued by financially weaker companies than those that turn up in conventional corporate bond funds. The NBI High Yield Bond ETF (NHYB) has produced a 4.6 per cent total return so far this year, according to Morningstar Canada.

    Here’s the catch with high yield bond ETFs – though they do well in a rising rate world, they tend to fall hard when stocks crash. If you want a hedge against the next stock market decline, they’re no substitute for ETFs holding government and investment-grade corporate bonds.

    Real return bonds seem a promising option for investors right now because they adjust their principal value higher to compensate for increases in inflation. Rising prices are a big reason why rates are expected to rise more than expected.

    Here are how some popular bond exchange-traded funds in various categories have held up in 2021.

Videos of the Week, Ted Rogers, Elon Musk, and Zillow

Friday morning news drop

  • How Ted Rogers's preoccupation with family control planted seeds for the turmoil in his empire B.C. court to rule on who's in charge of Canada's largest telecom under its complex ownership structure (CBC)

  • Province to introduce cooling-off periods for home buying A cooling-off period would give buyers a limited amount of time to change their minds and cancel a purchase with little or no legal consequences. (Times Colonist)

  • The Booming Underground Market for Bots That Steal Your 2FA Codes The bots convincingly and effortlessly help hackers break into Coinbase, Amazon, PayPal, and bank accounts. (Vice)

  • Unlimited Sand and Money Still Won’t Save the Hamptons How much sand can a half-billion dollars dredge up? Almost certainly not enough. (Bloomberg)

  • Zillow Torched $381 Million Overpaying for Houses. Spectacular. Zillow is easy to mock here. Losing almost $400 million in three months when you could’ve done almost anything else is extremely make-fun-able, not to mention retrospectively wasteful. It’s also possible that the machines will never be good enough to do this on their own in a way that works for both sellers and the companies trying to buy their houses. (Slate)

  • Elon Musk Is Building a Sci-Fi World, and the Rest of Us Are Trapped in It The metaverse is at once an illustration of and a distraction from a broader and more troubling turn in the history of capitalism. The world’s techno-billionaires are forging a new kind of capitalism: Muskism. Mr. Musk, who likes to troll his rivals, mocked Mr. Zuckerberg’s metaverse. But from missions to Mars and the moon to the metaverse, it’s all Muskism: extreme, extraterrestrial capitalism, where stock prices are driven less by earnings than by fantasies from science fiction. (New York Times)

  • The last great mystery of the mind: meet the people who have unusual – or non-existent – inner voices Most of us have an inner voice: that constant presence that tells you to “Watch out” or “Buy shampoo” or “Urgh, this guy’s a creep”. For many of us, this voice sounds much like our own, or at least how we think we sound. But for some people, their inner voice isn’t a straightforward monologue that reproaches, counsels and reminds. Their inner voice is a squabbling Italian couple, say, or a calm-faced interviewer with their hands folded on their lap. Or it’s a taste, feeling, sensation or colour. In some cases, there isn’t a voice at all, just silence. (The Guardian)

  • Soccer Looks Different When You Can’t See Who’s Playing Broadcast tracking technology captures how players move their limbs by reproducing filmed action displayed as stick-figure skeletons in a two-dimensional render. Show the same clips to different viewers as either a video or an anonymized animation, they could measure how attitudes toward race and gender affect how we see soccer. (FiveThirtyEight)

Videos of the Week

INBOUND - Brendan Howey x Rupert Walker INBOUND showcases Brendan Howey’s impeccable riding style and Rupert Walker’s intricate cuts and attention to detail.

Glory Daze ft. Reece Wallace | Giant Bicycles The 90s and early 2000s were the glory days of freeride. Skinnies, ladder bridges, and teeter totters paved the way for riders like Reece Wallace to carve his own path. Extrapolating from old-school freeride, he drew inspiration to build new features which paid homage to this past in 'Glory Daze'.

Long Live Chainsaw - Official Trailer: The untold, true story of mountain bike legend Stevie Smith. Long Live Chainsaw reveals the true story of the meteoric rise, untimely death and long-lasting legacy of Canadian downhill mountain bike racer, Stevie Smith. From humble beginnings being raised by a single mom, Stevie’s unwavering belief not only propelled him to become the best in the world but inspired everyone he touched to follow their own impossible dreams. The film is made with the full cooperation of the family and friends of Stevie Smith, who have given permission for this to be the first feature documentary about his life; Union Cycliste Internationale and numerous filmmakers, who have provided exclusive footage of his races and life; and the Stevie Smith Legacy Foundation, the charitable foundation established after his death to inspire and empower the next generation of underprivileged racers.

"ATENCIO!" // WETHEPEOPLE BMX Wethepeople AM Stephan Atencio put blood sweat and tears into this one. The work ethic of this guy speaks for itself. Filmed in the streets of Barcelona by Guille Lyon. Edited by Rafael Delgado.

RAW CHAOS - SWAMPFEST 2021 The rail loop was Linwood Monk and Noah Monroe. The loop was Adam Penberg. Dylan Stark on the big jump. The BSD jam winner was River Biasi. I had to export/upload the video before I got on my flight home and didn’t have time so I couldn’t do a few things like color correct and crop the vignette out of some of the clips. Figured you’d want it six hours earlier. I am gonna try to do a full “props style” video about the weekend, but I have a lot on my plate the next few days. We’ll see how my energy holds up… -Ry

Simone Barraco - 10%: Simone celebrates 10 years with an all new video in the only place he would want it to be filmed in, Barcelona. A weird year meant not much travel and forced him to explore his own city more. This video proves how Simo continues to push originality year after year with the style of riding and the overall look.

United BMX - Clement Santos-Silva - Bienvenue: Sit back and enjoy this latest project from United x BMX Avenue's French firecracker Clément Santos-Silva. This bangs!

Josh Douglas' "Air's on Fire" Part Firing off in Florida and handling hubbas in the West, Josh tackles iconic spots across the country. The UCI NBD is something sweet.

Spitfire’s “Live to Burnside” Video Three SOTYs and a solid squad from the 'Fire scorch across Burnside's sacred 'crete. Three decades in, the bridge still provides.

Touch The Snow - A Video About Carving: The newest offering from Dylan Siggers and the Burrrlapz, 'Touch The Snow' pairs old-school turning with a new-school fashion. From skiing a T-Bar to lapping top to bottom laps at Fernie Alpine Resort, the Burrrlapz reminds us that with the right crew and the right gear it doesn't matter what or where you're skiing. As long as you're skiing, the good times are going to roll. So tune in to this new offering as the Burrrlapz carves up interior BC with a style that will have you craving more.

Oh Man - Full Film: Riders: Dustin Craven, Darcy Keller, Tyler Lightfoot, Romain Demarchi, Mateo Massitti, Dozer, Mikey Rencz, and Chalres White.

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