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BusinessWeek February 20, 2006 |
"Economists Suffer from Physics Envy" In search of a better economics theory, MIT's Andrew Lo says evolutionary dynamics could shed light on why investors behave as they do |
Financial Planning September 1, 2006 Joan Warner |
Lo and Behold Andrew Lo's Adaptive Markets Hypothesis bring financial behavior into startling focus -- and could point the way toward more constructive relationships with clients. |
Financial Planning July 1, 2005 Joshua Weinberger |
White Paper A new theory of financial behavior: The seeming irrationality of the typical investor is, in fact, a series of adaptive responses to an uncertain, rapidly changing environment. |
U.S. Banker February 2010 Michael Dumiak |
The Neuroscience of Money: Finding How Traders Tick Researchers are using neurology, genetics, biology and physics to build hypotheses about financial behavior. What can bankers and regulators learn from the results? |
CFO January 1, 2008 Edward Teach |
A Hedge-Fund Mystery Why did a number of equity hedge funds suffer big losses in August 2007, and what do those losses say about systemic risk? |
Registered Rep. January 28, 2005 |
Financial Consultant and Therapist Hot topics at the recent Investment Management Consultants Association's conference: The role of therapist--and even amateur neurologist--is creeping into the financial advisory business; alternative investments, such as hedge fund index funds. |
Chemistry World October 31, 2012 Derek Lowe |
High finance meets big pharma? MIT professor and hedge-fund manager Andrew Lo has a plan to gather together as many plausible early-stage oncology projects as possible, and raise money by 'securitizing' their future revenues and issuing bonds from this portfolio. |