A Mathematician Plays The Stock Market

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By John Allen Paulos

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This item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around October 11, 2007. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.

Can a renowned mathematician successfully outwit the stock market? Not when his biggest investment is WorldCom. In A Mathematician Plays the Stock Market , best-selling author John Allen Paulos employs his trademark stories, vignettes, paradoxes, and puzzles to address every thinking reader’s curiosity about the market — Is it efficient? Is it random? 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? Are there any approaches to investing that truly outperform the major indexes? But Paulos’s tour through the irrational exuberance of market mathematics doesn’t end there. An unrequited (and financially disastrous) love affair with WorldCom leads Paulos to question some cherished ideas of personal finance. He explains why “data mining” is a self-fulfilling belief, why “momentum investing” is nothing more than herd behavior with a lot of mathematical jargon added, why the ever-popular Elliot Wave Theory cannot be correct, and why you should take Warren Buffet’s “fundamental analysis” with a grain of salt. Like Burton Malkiel’s A Random Walk Down Wall Street , this clever and illuminating book is for anyone, investor or not, who follows the markets — or knows someone who does.
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On Sale
Oct 11, 2007
Page Count
224 pages
Publisher
Basic Books
ISBN-13
9780465009701

John Allen Paulos

About the Author

John Allen Paulos is a professor of mathematics at Temple University. His books include the bestseller Innumeracy, A Mathematician Plays the Stock Market, and Irreligion. He lives in Philadelphia.

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