A Mathematician Plays the Stock Market
We like to think not only that mathematicians are smarter than the rest of us but that by dint of their mastery of numbers, they hold the key to understanding the baffling mysteries of the universe. Alas, Paulos (Innumeracy) says that's not always the case. As the author relates in this funny, insightful little volume about attempts to bring order and science to the free-for-all that is the stock market, he himself was once a big investor (in WorldCom). Despite strong evidence to sell, he desperately hung on to his stock as the price plummeted, proving that a head for numbers doesn't always translate to Wall Street know-how. Through most of this book, Paulos discusses various methods for predicting markets and offers thoughts on why people keep trying to perfect them. Shocking in their obtuseness are the so-called Elliot Wave followers, who believe stocks operate according to an impossibly arcane series of numerical waves and cycles.Download Here
Random Posts
- Manage Software Testing
- SQL Server Security Distilled 2nd Edition - APress
- Advanced Cellular Network Planning and Optimisation: 2G/2.5G/3G…Evolution to 4G
- Trump Strategies for Real Estate Billionaire Lessons for the Small Investor - George Ross
- Consumer Report May 2007
- C++ for Mathematicians: An Introduction for Students and Professionals
- Database Programming with VB.NET and ADO.NET (with source code)
- J2EE Professional Projects
- Advances In UML And XML based Software Evolution - Idea Group
- Data Mining Patterns: New Methods and Applications

















