Clowns to suffer death by Fractals-
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The Misbehavior of Markets: A Fractal View of Risk, Ruin and Reward FROM THE PUBLISHER "Together with Richard L. Hudson, Benoit Mandelbrot turns a fractal eye to the behavior of financial markets and overturns the "random walk" theory that is the underpinning of all contemporary financial analysis. Markets, we learn, are far riskier than we have wanted to believe." "The ability to simplify the complex has made Mandelbrot one of the century's most influential mathematicians. With his fractal models, the (mis)behavior of the world's markets - from the gyrations of IMB's stock price and the Dow, to cotton trading, and the dollar-Euro exchange rate - can be understood in more accurate terms than the tired theories of yesteryear." The (Mis)Behavior of Markets is a reevaluation of the standard tools and models of modern financial theory. Mandelbrot's fresh insights explode the false assumptions that have caused millions of investors, traders, and managers to underestimate the real risk, of the market. FROM THE CRITICS Soundview Executive Book Summaries A Fractal View of Risk, Ruin and Reward The work of mathematical genius Benoit Mandelbrot has been turning heads since the early 1960s. As an award-winning scientist, he has always broken from the pack of others to originate groundbreaking ideas that simplify complex problems and forces, such as the forces that create complexity in financial analysis. One of these ideas is fractal geometry (a scientific discovery which makes computer animation possible). A fractal is a geometric shape that can be broken into smaller parts, each a small-scale echo of the whole, such as the branches of a tree or the bifurcations of a river. Fractal geometry goes beyond the smooth lines and planes of circles and squares and applies wherever roughness is present. Studying roughness, Mandelbrot found fractal order where others had seen only disorder, and changed our view of nature as well as the irregular charts of a stock index or exchange rate. In The (Mis)Behavior of Markets, Mandelbrot and Wall Street Journal editor Richard L. Hudson explore marketplace risk and how Mandelbrot's fractal theories can be used to predict marketplace outcomes and make the market more secure.
According to the authors, fractal finance is a tool that can be used to reduce the way a specific price varies to a small number of mathematical theories and models. With these powerful tools, an analyst can model how an asset behaves, process various possible scenarios with computer models, and evaluate the risk of an investment with more accuracy. Prices of trade goods and exchange rates, for example, might not be able to be predicted with complete accuracy, but the authors write that they can be measured and characterized, and their volatility can be forecast.
Shaky Business Throughout The (Mis)Behavior of Markets, the authors explain that much of "what passes for orthodoxy in economics and finance proves, on closer examination, to be shaky business." As someone who has always disrespected "received wisdom," Mandelbrot writes that his ideas about economics come from observation, and not abstract theory. As a practical and objective observer of the patterns of financial markets, he has collected 10 "obvious" facts. He calls these his "Ten Heresies of Finance." They include:
Markets Are Turbulent. After studying the patterns found in wind tunnels and ocean currents, Mandelbrot applied his "multifractal" math to the analysis of financial markets. He writes, "The tell-tale traces of turbulence are plainly there, in the price charts. It has the turbulent parts that scale up to echo the whole." The normal expectations of the bell curve do not capture its changes, and only the metaphor of turbulence can be used to describe it. Markets Are Very, Very Risky - More Risky Than the Standard Theories Imagine. Turbulence is dangerous because it can swing wildly and suddenly. Not only is it hard to predict, but it is harder to protect against, and hardest of all to engineer and profit from. Market "Timing" Matters Greatly. Big Gains and Losses Concentrate Into Small Packages of Time. Since news events like corporate earnings releases and inflation reports help drive prices, big news can cause big market action, and that action concentrates in small slices of time. Particulars matter more than averages, the authors point out, so getting the timing right can produce giant windfalls, such as the two weeks in 1992 when George Soros made $2 billion by betting against the British pound. Prices Often Leap, Not Glide. That Adds to the Risk. The conceptual difference between economics and classic physics is the capacity for jumps, or discontinuity. In financial markets, news can compel many investors to act all at once, now and instantaneously.
Why We Like This Book The (Mis)Behavior of Markets re-evaluates the standard tools of financial theory and injects them with the insights of a man who uses simple explanations to dissolve the false assumptions that have caused many investors to underestimate the risks involved in the market. By pointing out the flaws in previous thinking, and using scientific research and ideas to ground his theories, Mandelbrot once again changes the way we think. Copyright © 2004 Soundview Executive Book Summaries
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rolf dobelli, A reviewer, October 15, 2004, A Must-Read! Finance is a difficult and recondite subject, perhaps second only to mathematics in its inability to inspire excitement in most readers. Yet Benoit Mandelbrot and Richard L. Hudson, co-authors of this book, manage to turn financial math into a great yarn, full of interesting characters and dramatic events. Some of what the book actually says will be old news to market professionals, but it says it quite interestingly. Mandelbrot did some of his most important financial work in the 1960s, but his ideas about leptokurtosis (which deals with the shape of probability functions), fractals (which deal with repetitive patterns) and such have received quite a bit of subsequent attention in trading rooms and in the finance departments of major universities. So, perhaps, it is merely a dramatic device that this book presents Mandelbrot as a solitary, clear-thinking prophet struggling against a blind and hostile economic orthodoxy. That presentation certainly succeeds as drama — the story races along and the reader keeps rooting harder and harder for Mandelbrot to win. The co-authors have spun an excellent saga that says important things in a new way. We think every investor, every business journalist and every financial professional ought to read this book. |