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Loading... A Mathematician Plays The Stock Marketby John Allen Paulos
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. To refresh my thoughts regarding whether I should jump to a new brokerage firm or not, I decided to pull out A Mathematician Plays the Stock Market and read through it again. Mostly I focused on his chapters on technical analysis, fundamental analysis, and sections on the efficient market hypothesis. (Full review at my blog) no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0465054811, Paperback)In A Mathematician Plays the Stock Market best-selling author John Allen Paulos demonstrates what the tools of mathematics can tell us about the vagaries of the stock market. Employing his trademark stories, vignettes, paradoxes, and puzzles (and even a film treatment), Paulos addresses every thinking reader's curiosity about the market: Is it efficient? Is it rational? Is there anything to technical analysis, fundamental analysis, and other supposedly time-tested methods of picking stocks? How can one quantify risk? What are the most common scams? What light do fractals, network theory, and common psychological foibles shed on investor behavior? Are there any approaches to investing that truly outperform the major indexes? Can a deeper knowledge of mathematics help beat the odds?All of these questions are explored with the engaging erudition that made Paulos's A Mathematician Reads the Newspaper and Innumeracy favorites with both armchair mathematicians and readers who want to think like them. Paulos also shares the cautionary tale of his own long and disastrous love affair with WorldCom. In the tradition of Burton Malkiel's A Random Walk Down Wall Street and Jeremy Siegel's Stocks for the Long Run, this wry and illuminating book is for anyone, investor or not, who follows the markets-or knows someone who does. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:56 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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An academic, Paulos writes text that is easy to read. He writes very openly about his large loss on WorldCom stock.
A few quotes:
"Transparency, trust, independence, and authority are all needed to make accounting work. They are all in great demand, but sometimes in short supply."
"On the whole, most investors, professionals on Wall Street, amateurs everywhere, disbelieve (the Efficient Market Hypothesis), so for this reason I think it holds, but only approximately and only most of the time."
"For better or worse, we're on our own." (