Jack L. Treynor Volume 1, Number 2, Second Quarter 2003 View PDF… Read more
Second Quarter (2003)
PRACTITIONER’S DIGEST
Volume 1, Number 2, Second Quarter 2003 View PDF… Read more
BOOK REVIEWS: Iceberg Risk: An Adventure in Portfolio Theory / Practical Spectulation
Volume 1, Number 2, Second Quarter 2003 Iceberg Risk: An Adventure in Portfolio Theory Kent Osband Reviewed by Craig W. French Practical Speculation Victor Niederhoffer and Laurel Kenner Reviewed by Mark Kritzman View PDF… Read more
WORKING PAPERS: Hedge Funds
Sanjiv R. Das Volume 1, Number 2, Second Quarter 2003 View PDF… Read more
The Treynor Capital Asset Pricing Model
Craig W. French Volume 1, Number 2, Second Quarter We explore unpublished early work of Jack Treynor, who deserves credit for the original Capital Asset Pricing Model because of his revolutionary manuscripts, “Market Value, Time, and Risk” and “Toward a Theory of Market Value of Risky Assets”, which were circulated during the 1960s but have… Read more
Fiscal Policy and Inflation: Pondering the Imponderables
Eric M. Leeper Volume 1, Number 2, Second Quarter 2003 An asset-pricing perspective on inflation reveals that it depends on current and expected monetary and fiscal policies. There are three ways to carry $1 today into the future: money, bonds, and real assets. That dollar’s purchasing power varies inversely with the price level. Expected money… Read more
Short Volatility Strategies: Identification, Measurement, and Risk Management
Mark Anson and Ho Ho Volume 1, Number 2, Second Quarter 2003 Many investors demand position transparency from hedge fund managers in the belief that more information is better than less. However, certain hedge fund strategies create synthetic investment positions that resemble a short put option, and these positions are not revealed by position transparency… Read more
A Practical Framework for Portfolio Choice
Ricahrd O. Michaud Volume 1, Number 2, Second Quarter 2003 Traditional portfolio optimality criteria often have serious theoretical or practical limitations. A financial planning portfolio choice framework consisting of a resampled efficient portfolio set and geometric mean analysis is a practical alternative for many situations of investment interest. While Monte Carlo financial planning is a… Read more
Great Moments in Financial Economics: II. Modigliani-Miller Theorem
Mark Rubinstein Volume 1, Number 2, Second Quarter 2003 Franco Modigliani and Merton Miller are almost universally credited with the theorem that bears their name. In fact, the theorem was stated and proven 20 years earlier by John Burr Williams, to which he gave the name: “the Law of the Conservation of Investment Value.” However… Read more
INSIGHTS: Phase Shifts
Dean LeBaron Volume 1, Number 2, Second Quarter 2003 The physical world is composed of phase shifts, and we generally accept and understand the implications. The failure to recognize a phase shift that has taken place is exemplified by the perception of investment people about where they stand in the world … even what they… Read more