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The Adaptive Markets Hypothesis: An Evolutionary Approach to Understanding Financial System Dynamics

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The Adaptive Markets Hypothesis (AMH) presents a formal and systematic exposition of a new narrative about financial markets that reconciles rational investor behaviour with periods of temporary financial insanity. In this narrative, intelligent but fallible investors learn from and adapt to randomly shifting environments. Financial markets may not always be efficient, but they are highly competitive, innovative, and adaptive, varying in their degree of efficiency as investor populations and the financial landscape change over time.

Andrew Lo and Ruixun Zhang develop the mathematical foundations of the AMH—a simple yet surprisingly powerful set of evolutionary models of behaviour—and then apply these foundations to show how the most fundamental economic behaviours that we take for granted can arise solely through natural selection. Drawing on recent advances in cognitive neuroscience and artificial intelligence, the book also explores how our brain affects economic and financial decision making.

The AMH can be applied in many contexts, ranging from designing trading strategies, to managing risk and understanding financial crises, to formulating macroprudential policies to promote financial stability. This volume is a must read for anyone who has ever been puzzled and concerned by the behaviour of financial markets and the implications for their personal wealth, and seeks to learn how best to respond to such behaviour.

Συγγραφείς: Lo Andrew, Zhang Ruixun
Εκδότης: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Σελίδες: 800
ISBN: 9780199681143
Εξώφυλλο: Σκληρό Εξώφυλλο
Αριθμός Έκδοσης: 1
Έτος έκδοσης: 2024

1:Introduction and Roadmap
2:The Origin of Behaviour
3:Mutation
4:Group Selection
5:Probability Matching
6:Risk Aversion
7:Cooperation
8:Bounded Rationality and Intelligence
9:Learning to be Bayesian
10:The Madness of Mobs
11:Fear, Greed, and Financial Crises
12:The Psychophysiology of Trading
13:What Makes a Good Day Trader?
14:A Computational View of Market Efficiency
15:Maximizing Relative vs. Absolute Wealth
16:Hedge Funds: The Galápagos Islands of Finance
17:What Happened to the Quants in August 2007?
18:Co-Evolution of Financial Markets and Technology
19:The Role of Culture in Finance
20:Regulation and Adaptive Markets

Andrew W. Lo is the Charles E. and Susan T. Harris Professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management and director of the MIT Laboratory for Financial Engineering. He is the author of Hedge Funds and the coauthor of A Non-Random Walk Down Wall Street (both Princeton), among other books.

Ruixun Zhang is an assistant professor and Boya Young Fellow in the School of Mathematical Sciences at Peking University (PKU). He is also affiliated with the PKU Laboratory for Mathematical Economics and Quantitative Finance, the PKU Center for Statistical Science, and the PKU National Engineering Laboratory for Big Data Analysis and Applications. Prior to joining PKU, he worked at several places including Google and Goldman Sachs. Zhang received Ph.D. in applied mathematics from MIT in 2015, and B.S. in mathematics and applied mathematics and B.A. in economics from Peking University in 2011. His research interests include evolutionary models of financial behavior, sustainable investing, FinTech, and applications of machine learning.

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