Posted on August 18, 2008 by Niranjan
Bloomberg Magazine’s cover story – Citi’s wake up call – on the financial conglomerate’s $54.6 billion in writedowns and credit costs and their new CEO.
The Tata Invasion in the New Yorker on developing country multinationals and their forays into Western markets
Strange and unique stock indicators, via Investopedia. The article sums it up well,
If you dig [...]
Filed under: finance, links | Tagged: citi, tata | Leave a Comment »
Posted on July 29, 2008 by Niranjan
Slate has a simple test of rationality, which is really the Allais Paradox. To understand the significance of the Allais Paradox, one has to go back to the Expected Utility Theory proposed by John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern in 1944. According to this theory, the expected utility of a gamble or a lottery with [...]
Filed under: finance, psychology | Tagged: behavioral finance, prospect theory, utility theory | Leave a Comment »
Posted on July 26, 2008 by Niranjan
The gist of Taleb’s book can be explained, at the risk of oversimplification, by using a few examples rooted in basic probability of the kind that relies on a simple coin toss experiment. Suppose one tosses a fair coin 5 times, with a reward associated with getting 5 consecutive heads. The probability associated with this [...]
Filed under: books, finance | Tagged: cognitive bias, fooled by randomness, nassim taleb, probability | 1 Comment »
Posted on July 24, 2008 by Niranjan
Notes and numbers from McKinsey Global Insitiute’s (MGI) fourth annual report on Mapping Global Capital Markets.
The world’s financial assets (calculated by adding together the market value of publicly traded equities, bank deposits, and outstanding face value of government and private debt securities for 100 countries in the MGI database) rose by $25 trillion in 2006, [...]
Filed under: finance | Tagged: capital markets | Leave a Comment »
Posted on July 22, 2008 by Niranjan
In this book, Galbraith rounds up instances of financial booms and busts, starting from the Tuliopomania in the mid-1630s to the stock market crash in 1987. He cites two primary factors as being the cause of this financial euphoria: the brevity of financial memory and the association of wealth with intelligence. About the former, Galbraith [...]
Filed under: books, finance | Tagged: financial bubbles | 1 Comment »
Posted on July 21, 2008 by Niranjan
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) estimated in September 2007 that sovereign wealth funds, or SWFs, control as much as $3 trillion, and that this tally could jump to $12 trillion by 2012. … As of early 2008, the total assets of SWFs, estimated at nearly $3 trillion, surpass the $1.5 trillion managed by hedge funds worldwide—but [...]
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Posted on July 21, 2008 by Niranjan
In the January 2007 issue of Bloomberg Markets, Peter Carr profiles Robert Engle, co-recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2003 for his autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (ARCH) model [Link].
To understand the ARCH model, we first need to know the definition of the terms: heteroskedasticity and volatility clustering. A univariate stochastic process is said to [...]
Filed under: finance | Tagged: time series | Leave a Comment »
Posted on July 20, 2008 by Niranjan
Its Medallion Fund–which uses computers and trading algorithms to invest in world markets–returned more than 50 percent in the first three quarters of 2007. It had about $6 billion in assets as of July 1. Simons registered that performance as subprime and related markets were collapsing, sending two mortgage-related hedge funds run by Bear Stearns [...]
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Posted on July 20, 2008 by Niranjan
As of March, by one estimate, there was a staggering $2 trillion invested in hedge funds worldwide, up nearly tenfold from 1999. Today, there are more than 9,000 hedge funds, 351 of which manage $1 billion or more. Traditional investment firms are bleeding talent to hedge funds, and there’s a lot of room left for [...]
Filed under: finance | Tagged: hedge funds | 2 Comments »