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Great book if you're interested in the history of LTCM. Oct 14, 2009 I really enjoyed this book. It is easy to read, and I recommend it to anyone interested in learning about LTCM.
The Triumph of Timeless Truths Sep 19, 2009 Somebody suggested that for every 3 books you read, make sure that one of them is at least eight years old (from its initial publication date). This particular book demonstrates the legitimacy of the suggestion.
This is required reading for anyone involved in the fields of finance/ economics/mathematics or the social sciences. The moral of this story is really captured from a quote attributed to John Maynard Keynes on page 123:
"Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent."
Lowenstein is a superb story-teller. This is a mystery, thriller, non-fiction account of the intrigue and insights into the minds of those on Wall Street who evolved the prototypical hedge fund. It is a story about assumptions, thinking and hubris.
As Lowenstein says:
"Finance is poetically just; it punishes the reckless with special fervor." (p. 179).
Not only do markets possess the capacity for irrationality, the businesses and the people behind them can be unreasonable and simply wrong. For finance professionals, this book is a stunning reminder that the risks of tomorrow cannot always be inferred from the examination and inferences made from yesterday's information. The author makes a solid case for the observation that uncertainty and risk do not always cooperate with the results produced by quantitative modeling.
Read this book. You don't have to be a finance professional, investor or mathematics wizard to garner the timeless truths that are illuminated throughout this carefully crafted story....truths whose essence endures today --- Truth has a habit of doing that (enduring) doesn't it?
Well Worth the Read for Any Investor Sep 15, 2009 I've read this book several times just to remind me of the dynamics and egos behind the market. Not that it's all bad, because it's not, but just to remind myself of the real influences in the market and what can go wrong when the bets get too big. It's intriguing to learn about the build-up, the players and the thinking at such a then important moment in our market's history. In light of the market trials of the past year (2008-2009), this book provides some deja vu and perspective. For me, this should be required reading for any investor. I really like the book and recommend it. Kenneth H Marks, lead author of The Handbook of Financing Growth: Strategies, Capital Structure, and M&A Transactions (Wiley Finance)
Book is great, but the Kindle Edition has lots of shoddy errors Aug 26, 2009 I very much enjoyed the book- definitely apropos to the current Wall St stuff, and a lot of the characters are the same...
The Kindle version had at least 30 mispellings, words that were missing or split, as if a quick optical character recognition scan was used to create the book. I think the publisher could do better. The beginning of Chapter 10 omitted half of the first sentence. The table of contents has only minimal functionality, not like the typical where the chapters show up as dots on the progress bar at the bottom of the screen.
It is certainly readable, but someone should take look at it before it gets published.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Amazing Aug 14, 2009 This is an amazing story about Long-Term Capital Management. A group of brilliant individuals with a combined experience of easily over 100 years, investing their own life savings and doing business in their field of expertise, go broke and nearly take down the entire financial system. This was all possible with their reliance on mathematics combined with an unbelievable amount of leverage. Their mistake was that they assumed that the markets were going to behave according to their mathematical models. Unfortunately, they forgot that markets are driven by humans that experience emotions such as fear and greed.
I could not put this book down. I believe every investor should read this book including the hot shots on Wall Street who think they cannot go wrong and apply lots of leverage. This is simply a fabulous story that anyone can learn from.
- Mariusz Skonieczny, author of Why Are We So Clueless about the Stock Market? Learn how to invest your money, how to pick stocks, and how to make money in the stock market
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