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The Myth of the Rational Market - A History of Risk, Reward, and Delusion on Wall Street (Paperback)
Loot Price: R547
Discovery Miles 5 470
You Save: R61
(10%)
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The Myth of the Rational Market - A History of Risk, Reward, and Delusion on Wall Street (Paperback)
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List price R608
Loot Price R547
Discovery Miles 5 470
You Save R61 (10%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Chronicling the rise and fall of the efficient market theory and
the century-long making of the modern financial industry, Justin
Fox's "The Myth of the Rational Market" is as much an intellectual
whodunit as a cultural history of the perils and possibilities of
risk. The book brings to life the people and ideas that forged
modern finance and investing, from the formative days of Wall
Street through the Great Depression and into the financial calamity
of today. It's a tale that features professors who made and lost
fortunes, battled fiercely over ideas, beat the house in blackjack,
wrote bestselling books, and played major roles on the world stage.
It's also a tale of Wall Street's evolution, the power of the
market to generate wealth and wreak havoc, and free market
capitalism's war with itself. The efficient market hypothesis -
long part of academic folklore but codified in the 1960s at the
University of Chicago - has evolved into a powerful myth. It has
been the maker and loser of fortunes, the driver of trillions of
dollars, the inspiration for index funds and vast new derivatives
markets, and the guidepost for thousands of careers.The theory
holds that the market is always right, and that the decisions of
millions of rational investors, all acting on information to
outsmart one another, always provide the best judge of a stock's
value. That myth is crumbling. Celebrated journalist and columnist
Fox introduces a new wave of economists and scholars who no longer
teach that investors are rational or that the markets are always
right. Many of them now agree with Yale professor Robert Shiller
that the efficient markets theory "represents one of the most
remarkable errors in the history of economic thought." Today the
theory has given way to counterintuitive hypotheses about human
behavior, psychological models of decision making, and the
irrationality of the markets. Investors overreact, underreact, and
make irrational decisions based on imperfect data. In his landmark
treatment of the history of the world's markets, Fox uncovers the
new ideas that may come to drive the market in the century ahead.
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