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Produktbild: Red-Blooded Risk

Red-Blooded Risk The Secret History of Wall Street

35,99 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., Versandkostenfrei


Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

11.10.2011

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons Inc

Seitenzahl

432

Maße (L/B/H)

23,5/15,7/2,8 cm

Gewicht

772 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-118-04386-8

Beschreibung

Rezension

"Wickedly original, one of the most fascinating accounts I have ever seen. A rollicking and highly opinionated read." (Risk Professional, October 2011)
"No one who reads Red-Blooded Risk: The Secret History of Wall Street will ever again regard risk management as a necessary but unproductive appendage of the financial industry. Other authors have chronicled how quantitative finance influenced investment management, but Aaron Brown has made a compelling case for a far more profound economic impact. . . If Red-Blooded Risk: The Secret History of Wall Street dealt with nothing more than the inadequacy of models used in highly important activities, it would represent a valuable contribution to financial economics. Brown's book, however, covers a great deal more than econometric malpractice. Probably no other book offers as much insight into the process with so little resort to mathematical notation. Especially valuable are Brown's discussions of middle-office risk management and value at risk, comparatively recent innovations that are essential to understanding modern financial institutions. Readers of Red-Blooded Risk should be prepared to have many of their assumptions challenged. Red-Blooded Risk is one of the most original and thought-provoking books reviewed in these pages in the past 20 years. No one who reads it will ever again regard risk management as a necessary but unproductive appendage of the financial industry. Other authors have chronicled how quantitative finance influenced investment management, but Aaron Brown has made a compelling case for a far more profound economic impact."
--Martin S. Fridson, CFA Institute Publications Book Reviews
"Red-Blooded Risk mixes risk history and philosophy nimbly and provides a perspective that can be both refreshing and challenging (often on the same page). While the book is not without weaknesses, it is also brimming with original perspectives and controversial opinions. Those who work in risk management or quantitative finance will enjoy Brown's story-telling and expert perspectives, even if they do not share his views, while non-quants will find his insights and confessions to be a useful glimpse into the psyche and ethos of an influential group of early quantitative risk takers.
--Roger M. Stein, Research and Academic Relations, Moody's Corporation, as reviewed in Quantitative Finance (August 6, 2012)

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

11.10.2011

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons Inc

Seitenzahl

432

Maße (L/B/H)

23,5/15,7/2,8 cm

Gewicht

772 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-118-04386-8

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Red-Blooded Risk
  • Acknowledgments xi

    Chapter 1 What This Book Is and Why You Should Read It 1

    Risk, Danger, and Opportunity 2

    Red- Blooded Risk Management 4

    Risk and Life 7

    Play and Money 9

    Frequentism 11

    Rationality 13

    Bets 15

    Exponentials and Culture 18

    Payoff 20

    Chapter 2 Red Blood and Blue Blood 23

    Chapter 3 Pascal's Wager and the Seven Principles of Risk Management 29

    Principle I: Risk Duality 32

    Principle II: Valuable Boundary 33

    Principle III: Risk Ignition 35

    Principle IV: Money 38

    Outside the VaR Boundary 40

    Principle V: Evolution 45

    Principle VI: Superposition 48

    Principle VII: Game Theory 49

    Chapter 4 The Secret History of Wall Street: 1654- 1982 57

    Pascal and Fermat 58

    Poker 61

    Advantage Gamblers 62

    Sports Betting 63

    Quants to Wall Street 66

    Finance People 68

    Real Finance 69

    Chapter 5 When Harry Met Kelly 73

    Kelly 74

    Harry 76

    Commodity Futures 79

    If Harry Knew Kelly 84

    Investment Growth Theory 88

    eRaider.com 92

    MPT Out in the World 96

    Chapter 6 Exponentials, Vampires, Zombies, and Tulips 101

    Types of Growth 102

    The Negative Side 105

    Tulips 106

    Tulip Propaganda 108

    Quantitative Tulip Modeling 111

    Money 112

    Chapter 7 Money 117

    Chapter 8 The Story of Money: The Past 125

    Property, Exchange, and Money 126

    Paleonomics 128

    Transition 131

    What Money Does 134

    Risk 135

    Government and Paper 138

    Paper versus Metal 142

    1776 and All That 145

    Andrew Dexter 147

    A Short Digression into Politics and Religion 150

    Chapter 9 The Secret History of Wall Street: 1983- 1987 155

    Efficient Markets 157

    Anomalies 159

    The Price Is Right Not! 161

    Efficiency versus Equilibrium 162

    Beating the Market 165

    Paths 170

    Sharpe Ratios and Wealth 174

    1987 177

    Chapter 10 The Story of Money: The Future 179

    Farmers and Millers 180

    Money, New and Improved 183

    A General Theory of Money 185

    Value and Money 189

    Numeraire 191

    Clearinghouses 196

    Cash 197

    Derivative Money 200

    The End of Paper 203

    Chapter 11 Cold Blood 207

    Chapter 12 What Does a Risk Manager Do?-Inside VaR 213

    Professional Standards 213

    Front Office 215

    Trading Risk 217

    Quants on the Job 218

    Middle Office 222

    Back Office 225

    Middle Office Again 227

    Looking Backward 228

    Risk Control 230

    Beyond Profit and Loss 232

    Numbers 234

    The Banks of the Charles 236

    Waste 238

    The Banks of the Potomac 241

    The Summer of My Discontent 245

    Validation 247

    Chapter 13 VaR of the Jungle 251

    Chapter 14 The Secret History of Wall Street: 1988- 1992 255

    Smile 256

    Back to the Dissertation 258

    Three Paths 262

    An Unexpected Twist 265

    Surprise! 267

    Computing VaR 271

    Chapter 15 Hot Blood and Thin Blood 277

    Chapter 16 What Does a Risk Manager Do?- Outside VaR 283

    Stress Tests 283

    Trans-VaR Scenarios 287

    Black Holes 289

    Why Risk Managers Failed to Prevent the Financial Crisis 290

    Managing Risk 296

    Unspeakable Truth Number One: Risk Managers Should Make Sure Firms Fail 299

    Unspeakable Truth Number Two: There's Good Stuff beyond the VaR Limit 305

    Unspeakable Truth Number Three: Risk Managers Create Risk 309

    Chapter 17 The Story of Risk 313

    Chapter 18 Frequency versus Degree of Belief 323

    Statistical Games 324

    Thorp, Black, Scholes, and Merton 329

    Change of Numeraire 333

    Polling 336

    The Quant Revolution 341

    Chapter 19 The Secret History of Wall Street: 1993- 2007 345

    Where Did the Money Come From? 348

    Where Did They Put the Money? 359

    Where Did the Money Go? 364

    Chapter 20 The Secret History of Wall Street: The 2007 Crisis and Beyond 369

    Postmortem 379

    A Risk Management Curriculum 387

    One Hundred Useful Books 393

    About the Author 401

    About the Illustrator 403

    Index 405