Category Archives: Fund management in general

A field guide to market participants

Fundamental Hawk (perusii balancesheetus) Very discriminating in diet.  Often seen scratching in the undergrowth. Subsists on irrationality,  short-lived variety only. Macro Harrier (exsanguinus economicus) Flies very high. Reports of bombardier behavior (unsubstantiated). Common Quant (quantus quantus) Flies backwards looking in mirror.  Seldom seen without a factor model. High Frequency Quant (quantus nanosecondii) Flies backwards really, … Continue reading

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Paying interest and the number e

Suppose I borrow a dollar from you and I’ll pay you 100% interest at the end of the year.  How much money will you have then? $1 * (1 + 1) = $2 What happens if instead the interest is calculated as  50% twice in the year? $1 * (1.5 * 1.5) = $2.25 After … Continue reading

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Elsewhere in the blogosphere this week

Markets Sex and statistics Marginal Revolution had the post Sex and Statistics or Heteroscedasticity is Hot which reports on the OkTrends post The Mathematics of Beauty. The summary is that conditional on their average beauty rating, the women with more variable ratings get more interest.  The post proposes a theory that there is less competition … Continue reading

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Boris The Banker explains efficient markets

Amy Anyone: What is EMH? Boris The Banker: That’s the Efficient Market Hypothesis, or sometimes the Efficient Markets Hypothesis. Amy: What’s that? Boris: It says that all available and relevant information has been taken into account in the price of items in the market — a stock market for example. Amy: Does it have any … Continue reading

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Some market predictions

We look at a few forecasts for the year 2011 that we’ve run across, and compare them with the prediction distributions presented in Revised market prediction distributions. FTSE 100 There is a “range forecast” on an Interactive Investor page of 5350 to 6565.  It isn’t clear (to me at least) what this means, but I … Continue reading

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Revised market prediction distributions

This provides revised plots of the prediction distributions published yesterday.  The previous plots of prediction distributions should be ignored — they are not doing as advertised. We show the prediction distribution of levels of several equity indices (plus oil price) at the end of 2011 assuming nothing happens.  That is, we’ve taken out market trends … Continue reading

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Creating prediction distributions

Here we give details and code for the prediction distributions exhibited in yesterday’s blog post “Tis the season to predict”. [Revision: There was a problem with the plots published in that post.  For corrected plots and an explanation of the error, see Revised market prediction distributions.] Eight years of returns The equity indices use daily … Continue reading

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Tis the season to predict

I predict there will be a lot of predictions of markets for the coming year.  Here is a calibration of such predictions. We show the prediction distribution of levels of several equity indices (plus oil price) at the end of 2011 assuming nothing happens.  That is, we’ve taken out market trends and just left drift … Continue reading

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Blog year 2010 in review

The blog year started in August and consists of 30-something posts.  Here is a summary. Most popular Ideas for World Statistics Day A quant review of “The Quants” by Scott Patterson A tale of two returns The tightrope of the random walk What the hell is a variance matrix? Most under-valued Most read is not … Continue reading

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The tightrope of the random walk

We’re really interested in markets, but we’ll start with a series of coin tosses.  If the coin lands heads, then we go up one; if it lands tails, we go down one. Figure 1: A coin toss path.Figure 1 is the result of one thousand coin flips.  It is a random walk. The R command … Continue reading

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