Essays about: "zero-cost"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 15 essays containing the word zero-cost.
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1. RTIC - A Zero-Cost Abstraction for Memory Safe Concurrency
University essay from Luleå tekniska universitet/Institutionen för system- och rymdteknikAbstract : Embedded systems are commonplace, often with real-time requirements, limited resources and increasingly complex workloads with high demands on security and reliability. The complexity of these systems calls for extensive developer experience and many tools has been created to aid in the development of the software running on such devices. READ MORE
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2. Downside risk: is downside risk being priced in the U.S. stock market?
University essay fromAbstract : This paper aims to add further research to the field of downside risk, and downside risk measures’ influence on the average returns in the U.S. stock market. READ MORE
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3. Moving beyond a narrow definition of value investing
University essay from Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för finansiell ekonomiAbstract : This study shows that the information content of valuation ratios can be highly dissimilar. It presents a value measure that outperforms book-to-market not only in terms of the abnormal returns a zero-cost portfolio formed on this sorting variable generates relative to factor models, but also in terms of its ability to capture firms with a high level of profitability and a strong profitability persistence. READ MORE
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4. Parallelization in Rust with fork-join and friends: Creating the fork-join framework
University essay fromAbstract : This thesis describes the design, implementation and benchmarking of a work stealing fork-join library, called ForkJoin, for the new language Rust. Rust is a programming language with a novel approach to memory safety and concurrency, and guarantees memory safety through zero-cost abstractions and thorough checks at compile time rather than run time. READ MORE
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5. Momentum in Stock Returns Following Dispersion and Consensus in Analysts' Forecasts
University essay from Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för finansiell ekonomiAbstract : Our study shows that it is possible for an investor to employ profitable zero-cost portfolio strategies on the OMX Stockholm Benchmark Index that exploit momentum following analysts' forecasts. The significant alpha of the monthly rebalanced long-short portfolios suggests that the analysts' forecasts momentum should be exploited within a month. READ MORE