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Books > Money & Finance > Investment & securities
Backing the Bold is a primer on the venture capital industry,
business, and profession in Southeast Asia. The goal of the book's
thirteen chapters has initially been to guide students of the
Insignia Ventures Academy - Asia's first experiential venture
capital accelerator - in their exploration of the venture capital
industry and profession, specifically in the context of Southeast
Asia's startup ecosystem and from the perspective of Insignia
Ventures and its portfolio founders.Rather than being a book in the
traditional sense of the word, such an origin and context for
Backing the Bold has inevitably made this book a dynamic piece of
literature, continuously growing and improving thanks to every new
group of people who become part of the VC accelerator - as
organizers, mentors, or participants.Now in print and in
distribution, this first edition is available for all as a snapshot
of Backing the Bold's progress as a continuously evolving
repository of insights, best practices, and frameworks. It is for
readers of any background or motivation to gain a better
understanding of the venture capital investment process, portfolio
management, and profession in the context of Southeast Asia's
fast-growing technology markets.
The recent evolution of an independent cross market, combined
with the technological advancements in computerized trading marked
the beginning of a new era in the Foreign Exchange Market.
Triangular arbitrage among currencies, once only a theory, is now
common practice for those with access to large amounts of money.
This book illustrates how converting from one currency to another,
then to another, and back to the original currency can be very
profitable. This study provides the first direct and precise test
of triangular arbitrage based on actual data.
A risk-free profit can be made by taking advantage of price
discrepancies of a currency in several different markets. The study
begins by reviewing past work on triangular arbitrage and provides
a comprehensive review of the Foreign Exchange Market and the
procedures of computerized trading. The author then presents the
theory of triangular arbitrage, given a group of five major
currencies. The last chapters develop methods of testing that are
original and based on empiracal information. The author is careful
to explain that profits arer dependent on many variables related to
market volume, volatility, inefficiency, and unexpected news. The
markets that consistently show the largest amounts of inefficiency
are the dollar-pound-yen, dollar-mark-yen, and dollar-yen-franc
markets. Inefficiencies in triangular arbitrage imply that
risk-free profitable opportunities exist. Traders can take
advantage of those opportunities by focusing their attention on the
markets in which profitable opportunities are available.
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