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A Random Walk Down Wall Street: The Time-Tested Strategy for Successful Investing (Twelfth Edition) Burton G. Malkiel on Amazon.com.FREE. shipping on qualifying offers. With the prevailing wisdom changing on an almost daily basis, Burton G. Malkiel’s reassuring and vastly informative volume remains the best investment guide money can buy. May 23, 2019 (PDF) A Random Walk Down Wall Street 12th PDF Review With the prevailing wisdom changing on an almost daily basis, Burton G. Malkiel’s reassuring and vastly informative volume remains the best investment guide money can buy. Take a random walk down wall-street to see the revolutionary monkey-man who changed it all. Today we're talking game theory, investment strategies, the efficient market hypothesis and at the very. Jul 21, 2019 Burton G. Malkiel wrote this book A Random Walk Down Wall Street pdf in 1973. This was a few years after the 20th century’s first computer technology bubble popped. The latest edition comes after the dot.com bubble pop. This was the last of the 20th century’s technology bubble.
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Author | Burton Malkiel |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Non-fiction |
Publisher | W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. |
1973 | |
Pages | 456 pp. |
ISBN | 0-393-06245-7 |
OCLC | 72798896 |
332.6 22 | |
LC Class | HG4521 .M284 2007 |
A Random Walk Down Wall Street, written by Burton Gordon Malkiel, a Princetoneconomist, is a book on the subject of stock markets which popularized the random walk hypothesis. Malkiel argues that asset prices typically exhibit signs of random walk and that one cannot consistently outperform market averages. The book is frequently cited by those in favor of the efficient-market hypothesis. As of 2019, there have been twelve editions and over 1.5 million copies sold.[1] A practical popularization is The Random Walk Guide to Investing: Ten Rules for Financial Success.[2]
Investing techniques[edit]
Malkiel examines some popular investing techniques, including technical analysis and fundamental analysis, in light of academic research studies of these methods. Through detailed analysis, he notes significant flaws in both techniques, concluding that, for most investors, following these methods will produce inferior results compared to passive strategies.
Malkiel has a similar critique for methods of selecting actively managed mutual funds based upon past performance. He cites studies indicating that actively managed mutual funds vary greatly in their success rates over the long term, often underperforming in years following their success, thereby regressing toward the mean. Malkiel suggests that given the distribution of fund performances, it is statistically unlikely that an average investor would happen to select those few mutual funds which will outperform their benchmark index over the long term.
Alternative view[edit]
In 1984, Warren Buffett gave a speech at Columbia University rebutting the Efficient Market Hypothesis. See The Superinvestors of Graham-and-Doddsville. As of 2013, Malkiel has not yet responded and has ignored Buffett's argument. As Seth Klarman has stated: 'Buffett's argument has never, to my knowledge, been addressed by the efficient-market theorists; they evidently prefer to continue to prove in theory what was refuted in practice'.[citation needed]
See also[edit]
- Common Sense on Mutual Funds, by John C. Bogle
References[edit]
- ^Burton Malkiel (2011) A random walk down Wall Street: the time-tested strategy for successful investing
- ^Hardback: ISBN978-0-393-05854-3, Paperback: ISBN978-0-393-32639-0
External links[edit]
- Une marche au hasard à travers la Bourse, French translation by Éric Pichet.