Like A Mathematician Plays the Market?
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3 Reviews
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曾堯 joetsang said on Mar 4, 2008 | Add your feedback
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A book about how an scholar attempt to win the stock market. Including, probability, chart diagram, statistic approach, Monte Carlo and fundamental analysis.
You cannot find the sure-win strategy. But you can find the incapability of each approach. If you're logical person and increase in math ... (continue)
Yung2004 said on Mar 29, 2008 | Add your feedback
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I couldn't finish it. As smart as the author is, his probabilistic analysis of capital markets does not ring true to me. Yes, from a purely academic point of view, the markets can be random and utterly unpredictable - but we all know in reality that markets are not perfect and smart investors really ... (continue)
s tsui said on Sep 20, 2006 | Add your feedback
Book Details
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Rating:




(16)
- English Books
- Paperback 224 Pages
- ISBN-10: 014101203X
- ISBN-13: 9780141012032
- Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
- Pub date: Jun 24, 2004
- Dimensions: 1226 mm x 839 mm x 65 mm Just how big is that?
- Also available as: Hardcover
- In other languages: other languages
Prices Change currency & sellers
| ISBN | Edition | List | Sale | Seller |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9780141012032 | Paperback | $16.08 | $10.10 | The Book Depository |
| Other editions → | ||||
1 person find this helpful
The synopsis starts with: "Could a maths expert outwit the stock market and make millions? John Allen Paulos, one of the world’s most renowned mathematicians, decided there was only one way to find out: to take a gamble on the investment game himself. But he soon discovered that even a maths guru ca ... (continue)
The synopsis starts with: "Could a maths expert outwit the stock market and make millions? John Allen Paulos, one of the world’s most renowned mathematicians, decided there was only one way to find out: to take a gamble on the investment game himself. But he soon discovered that even a maths guru can’t beat the market, and making the numbers add up was far harder (and more addictive) than he could ever have imagined."
He who wrote this synopsis obviously had not read the book, otherwise he would have known that Paulos plunged into the stock market and lost spectacularly, before writing this book partly to examine what and why he did wrong.
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