A look inside the world of âquantsâ and how science can (and canât) predict financial markets: âEntertaining and enlighteningâ (The New York Times). After the economic meltdown of 2008, Warren Buffett famously warned, âbeware of geeks bearing formulas.â But while many of the mathematicians and software engineers on Wall Street failed when their abstractions turned ugly in practice, a special breed of physicists has a much deeper history of revolutionizing finance. Taking us from fin-de-siècle Paris to Rat Packâera Las Vegas, from wartime government labs to Yippie communes on the Pacific coast, James Owen Weatherall shows how physicists successfully brought their science to bear on some of the thorniest problems in economics, from options pricing to bubbles. The crisis was partly a failure of mathematical modeling. But even more, it was a failure of some very sophisticated financial institutions to think like physicists. Modelsâwhether in science or financeâhave limitations; they break down under certain conditions. And in 2008, sophisticated models fell into the hands of people who didnât understand their purpose, and didnât care. It was a catastrophic misuse of science. The solution, however, is not to give up on models; itâs to make them better. This book reveals the people and ideas on the cusp of a new era in finance, from a geophysicist using a model designed for earthquakes to predict a massive stock market crash to a physicist-run hedge fund earning 2,478.6% over the course of the 1990s. Weatherall shows how an obscure idea from quantum theory might soon be used to create a far more accurate Consumer Price Index. The Physics of Wall Street will change how we think about our economic future. âFascinating history . . . Happily, the author has a gift for making complex concepts clear to lay readers.â âBooklist
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Oct 14, 2022
€15.39