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24 Works 366 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Andrew W. Lo is the Charles E. and Susan T. Harris Professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management and director of the MIT Laboratory for Financial Engineering. He is the author of Hedge Funds and the coauthor of A Non-Random Walk Down Wall Street (both Princeton), among other books.

Includes the name: Andrew Lo

Image credit: Andrew Lo - Credit MarketWath.com - Author's web site http://alo.mit.edu/

Series

Works by Andrew W. Lo

Financial Economics Vol 1 (2009) — Editor — 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1960-04-18
Gender
male

Members

Reviews

The first half of the book says that technical analysis is an ancient, low prestige, profitable occupation. The second half of the book goes into the modern evolution of technical analysis, and that it is hardly more respectable now than it was then than. The authors point out that there are flaws in the dominant theory, which is the Efficient Market Hypothesis, and therefore technical analysis has value.

According to the book, for thousands of years, Technical Analysis has not been respected, and it is still that way.… (more)
 
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bread2u | 1 other review | Jul 1, 2020 |
Hedge Funds Dissected: Perspectives and Proposals
Few areas of the investment world have proved more intractable to formal, scholarly exploration than the $2 trillion hedge fund sector, primarily because hedge funds remain relatively free from regulatory oversight and are thus not required to furnish information regarding their activities. Professor Andrew Lo is one of the intrepid few to delve into the mysteries of the seemingly impenetrable world of private investment funds. Noting that hedge funds have begun to attract the attention of institutional investors (such as pension funds) because of hedge funds’ past performance and unique capabilities, Professor Lo in this volume argues for the development of a systematic framework of portfolio analytics and risk management protocols specifically for managing exposure to hedge funds. In view of observations that hedge funds, because of their sheer presence in the financial ecosystem, contribute significantly to systemic risk, the author believes that the creation of a special hedge fund oversight group, a capital markets safety board with powers akin to those of the US’s National Transportation Safety Board, would be necessary in order to promote hedge fund transparency and overall financial security. The establishment of such a body, it is hoped, would help avert future LTCMs.… (more)
 
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melvinsico | 1 other review | Dec 19, 2008 |
MacKinlay, Archie Craig (Author)
 
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LOM-Lausanne | 1 other review | May 20, 2020 |
 
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LOM-Lausanne | 1 other review | May 20, 2020 |

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Works
24
Members
366
Popularity
#65,730
Rating
3.0
Reviews
7
ISBNs
53
Languages
3

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