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The (Mis) Behavior of Markets: A Fractal View of Risk, Ruin And Reward

From the inventor/founder of fractal geometry, the award-winning book that turns modern financial theory on its head

Mathematical superstar and inventor of fractal geometry, Benoit Mandelbrot, has spent the past forty years studying the underlying mathematics of space and natural patterns. What many of his followers don't realize is that he has also been watching patterns of market change.

In The (Mis)Behavior of Markets, Mandelbrot joins with science journalist and former Wall Street Journal editor Richard L. Hudson to reveal what a fractal view of the world of finance looks like. The result is a revolutionary reevaluation of the standard tools and models of modern financial theory. Markets, we learn, are far riskier than we have wanted to believe. From the gyrations of IBM's stock price and the Dow, to cotton trading, and the dollar-Euro exchange rate--Mandelbrot shows that the world of finance can be understood in more accurate, and volatile, terms than the tired theories of yesteryear. The ability to simplify the complex has made Mandelbrot one of the century's most influential mathematicians. With The (Mis)Behavior of Markets, he puts the tools of higher mathematics into the hands of every person involved with markets, from financial analysts to economists to 401(k) holders. Markets will never be seen as "safe bets" again.  more

  • From: Amazon
  • Posted: Sep-22-2009

Interesting but short on practical applications of theory.

The topic is interesting and useful in the explanation of the unexpected. Did not seem to explain how fractals and "fat tails" could be used to predict or forecast. Essentially it comes across as an warning that the world is much more dangerous than most people assume.

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  • From: Amazon
  • Posted: Aug-22-2009

Non-Practical Advice by an Arrogant Author

In several places, I saw this book touted as revolutionizing the investment world. I decided to get it and check it out. Having read over 200 books on investing, I was a little doubtful Mandelbrot had found the secret of investment success.As many other reviewers have already pointed out,...

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  • From: Amazon
  • Posted: Aug-22-2009

Still relevant five years later

I had occasion to reread this book and wanted to offer my thoughts about how the ideas have held up. I'm a huge Mandelbrot fan, I consider him one of the great living geniuses who has changed thinking in many fields. Plus he's enormously fun to read, even when he's wrong (and co-author Hudson...

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  • From: Amazon
  • Posted: Aug-01-2009

Insightful!!!!

I learned about Fractals, not in high school as i should have done but in my graduate education. Benoit's work and application in finance is innovative. A must read for anyone who is interested in abstractness.

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  • From: Amazon
  • Posted: Jul-27-2009

Worth reading but no secret formulas

He does a great job showing why various models fail. The book certainly would have been helpful a few years ago when few people saw that coming. There's a large section on fractuals that might be worth knowing but it doesn't seem usable. It's a bit like the pundit who says markets go up and down....

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  • From: Amazon
  • Posted: Mar-08-2009

What we've been doing wrong and what to look for from now on.

How tall can you expect your children to grow and how rich can you expect them to become? To a parent these are obviously different questions but a statistician will answer both the same way, using a model called the normal (or Gaussian) distribution. It turns out the Gaussian is a good predictor...

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  • From: Amazon
  • Posted: Mar-02-2009

Excellent book

It is a must for everyone looking for understanding of what is happening now in our world

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  • From: Amazon
  • Posted: Feb-27-2009

Radical new take on modern finance

This book should be recommended reading for all the eager beaver finance MBA's learn concepts like CAPM, Markowitz theory and risk capital budgeting. Mandelbrot's thesis challenges these very pillars of finance and highlights the hidden dangerous implications of the simplifying assumptions that...

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  • From: Amazon
  • Posted: Jan-30-2009

I,me,mine and myself

In his characteristically obnoxious style, Mandelbrot spends the first half of the book explaining why he disagrees with the Efficient Market Hypothesis: That is 150 pages to say that market returns are not normally distributed, but show "fat tails". One thing is clear from the book: he was the...

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  • From: Amazon
  • Posted: Oct-06-2008

Limited Value

Mandelbrot describes some problems with financial models that are designed to provide approximations of things that can't be perfectly modeled. He pretends that pointing out the dangers of relying too much on imperfect approximations shows some brilliant insight. But mostly he's just translating...

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