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Palgrave Macmillan

Finance's Wrong Turns

A New Foundation for Financial Markets, Asset Management, and Social Science

  • Book
  • © 2023

Overview

  • Exposes a foundational crisis in financial theory and professional investment practice
  • Addresses the limitations and resolutions for more useful financial theory
  • Traces the major historical developments of institutional asset management practice and its limitations
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Table of contents (8 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

There is a foundational crisis in financial theory and professional investment practice: There is little, if any, credible evidence that active investment strategies and traditional institutional quantitative technologies are able to provide superior risk-adjusted, cost-adjusted return over investment relevant horizons.

Economic and financial theory has been in error for more than fifty years and is the fundamental cause of the persistent ineffectiveness of professional asset management. Contemporary sociological and economic theory, agent-based modeling, and an appreciation of the social context for preference theory provides a rational and intuitive framework for understanding financial markets and economic behavior.  The author narrates his long-term experience in the use and limitations of traditional tools of quantitative asset management as an institutional asset manager in practice and as a quantitative analyst and strategist on Wall Street.  Monte Carlo simulation methods, modern statistical tools, and U.S. patented innovations are introduced to redefine portfolio optimality and procedures for enhanced professional asset management.  A new social context for expected utility theory leads to a novel understanding of modern equity markets as a financial intermediary for purchasing power constant time-shift investing uniquely appropriate for meeting investor long-term investment objectives. 

This book addresses the limitations and indicated resolutions for more useful financial theory and more reliable asset management technology. In the process, it traces the major historical developments of theory and institutional asset management practice and their limitations over the course of the 20th century to the present, including Markowitz and the birth of modern finance, CAPM theory and emergence of institutional quantitative asset management, CAPM and VM theory limitations and ineffective iconic tools and strategies, andinnovations in statistical methodologies and financial market theory. 


Authors and Affiliations

  • New Frontier Advisors, Boston, USA

    Richard O. Michaud

About the author

Richard Michaud, PhD, is President, Founder, and Chief Executive Officer of New Frontier Advisors. He earned a PhD in Mathematics and Statistics from Boston University, USA and has taught investment management at Columbia University, USA. His research and consulting has focused on asset allocation, investment strategies, global investment management, optimization, stock valuation, and trading costs. He is the author of Efficient Asset Management (with Robert Michaud), Investment Styles, Market Anomalies, and Global Stock Selection, and over 60 published journal articles, manuscripts, and white papers.  He is co-holder of four U.S. patents in portfolio optimization and asset management, a Graham and Dodd Scroll winner for his work on optimization, a former editorial board member of the Financial Analysts Journal, associate editor of the Journal of Investment Management, and former director of the “Q” Group. Dr. Michaud's research was recently profiled in WatersTechnology 2019:  "Rebel Math." Notable press articles also include Institutional Investor 2010: Modern Portfolio Theory’s Evolutionary Road, and Pensions & Investments 2003: “Markowitz says Michaud has built a better mousetrap.”

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