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One of his lesser-known talents was the ability to make vast sums of money on the stock market. At the time of his death, Keynes' net worth—almost entirely built through successful stock investments—amounted to the present-day equivalent of more than $30 million, and the college endowment fund he managed had massively outperformed the broader market over a two-decade period. Keynes was a member of that rare breed—an economist who flourished not only in the rarefied heights of ivory tower academia, but also amidst the bustle and hubbub of the financial markets.
But can an analysis of this particular incarnation of Keynes—the shrewd stock picker and star fund manager—be of any benefit to the modern investor? The answer, author Justyn Walsh demonstrates, is a resounding yes. In this era of day traders, delta ratios, and dot-coms, Keynes' observations on stock market behavior, in fact, are more relevant than ever.
The author reveals how, after twice being brought to the precipice of financial ruin as a result of financial speculation, Keynes developed the investment principles that would win him singular stock market success. He completely inverted his investment philosophy, switching from short-term speculator to a long-term investor—one who seeks to profit from pendulum swings in the market rather than participating in them. By effecting this transformation, Keynes became one of the world's first value investors, the forefather of a long line of venerable and highly successful stock market practitioners such as Warren Buffett and Sir John Templeton.
Keynes and the Market is an entertaining guide to John Maynard Keynes' amazing stock market success, weaving the economist's value investing tenets around key events in his richly lived life. Accessible and informative, it identifies what modern masters of the market have taken from Keynes and used in their own investing styles—and what you too can learn from one of the greatest economic thinkers of the twentieth century.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Short and Sweet,
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This review is from: Keynes and the Market: How the World's Greatest Economist Overturned Conventional Wisdom and Made a Fortune on the Stock Market (Hardcover)
Justyn Walsh's first book is remarkably fact packed and well written. In only two hundred pages, including copious endnotes and a bibliography, it focuses on the evolution of the remarkable economist, John Maynard Keynes, as an extraordinary investor in times very much like ours. Walsh pulls together the diverse and manifold aspects of Keynes' life and personality into a surprisingly thorough portrait. As a young man Keynes quickly made a reputation in finance serving on the English delegation to the WWI peace conference. His renown soared when he quit and wrote a devastating analysis of the "peace process" correctly predicting that it would lead to disaster (WWII). This book traces his evolution from "momentum trader" and a speculator in currencies to his post-crash persona as a "value investor." As a trader, Keynes had great success but came to disaster in the Depression, where he transformed to an investor in common stocks of "intrinsic" value very similar to the Graham-Buffett approach to the market. When he died in 1946, Keynes estate totaled about $30 million in today's dollars. Along the way, he managed his college's endowment into a five-fold increase and participated in the affairs of several insurance companies and investment trusts - all this while serving his country in a variety of economic posts such as negotiating loans from the U.S. to Britain and providing significant guidance at the Bretton Woods monetary accord. While it is not a "how to" book, Keynes and the Market clearly shows the way Keynes developed his investment technique and succinctly states a number of principles and guidelines useful for today's investor. This book is a wonderful addition to the larger tomes on Keynes, such as Robert Sidelsky's. It should also be on every investor/trader's bookshelf.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
4.5 stars-Stock and Financial Markets are not efficient due to the Impact of Uncertainty,
By Michael Emmett Brady "mandmbrady" (Bellflower, California ,United States) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Keynes and the Market: How the World's Greatest Economist Overturned Conventional Wisdom and Made a Fortune on the Stock Market (Hardcover)
This is an excellent book.The crucial divide between Keynes and the economics profession of the 1930's and 2000's was his deep understanding of the nature of the fundamental differences between decision making under conditions of uncertainty(partial ignorance) and/or ignorance(or D.Ellsberg's ambiguity or Benoit Mandelbrot's " wild " risk)as opposed to risk.Keynes understood that financial and stock markets were not efficient except under very special situations that would require an extremely heavy government regulatory apparatus aimed at minimizing the amount of speculation occurring in the financial,commodity,and stock markets over time.Keynes's formal,logical,technical mathematical analysis in the A Treatise on Probability(TP,1921;practically all of Keynes's relevant analysis was available in the fellowship dissertation that Keynes submitted to Cambridge University in 1908 ) ,that Walsh correctly describes as being understood by no more than 3 individuals,(The names of the 3 individuals were Bertrand Russell,Alfred North Whitehead and William Johnson.Unfortunately,there is only one individual alive today who understands what it was that Keynes accomplished .)allowed him to realize that the mathematical laws of the probability calculus[ the addition and multiplication rules at the heart of the " Modern " theory of finance constructed by the University of Chicago school of Markowitz,Treynor,Sharpe,Fama,Black,Merton,Scholes,etc.,as the foundation of the Efficient Market Hypothesis(EMH)] were greatly limited because no sample space of all possible outcomes or unique probability distribution could be defined in situations of partial or complete ignorance,in a world of constant,endogenous technological and financial change,which was the rule .Keynes realized that the Normal distribution, used automatically by all practitioners of the EMH in applications to financial markets ,and taught to all MBA students as " The Truth ", was NOT normal in financial markets.In fact, it was rarely the case(Here Walsh could have improved his book somewhat if he had spent some time showing the connections between J M Keynes's line of reasoning and the analysis of B Mandelbrot and N.N.Taleb).Only under conditions of risk would the EMH be a reliable theory to use to underpin financial portfolio analysis.There is no empirical,historical,or statistical support for the EMH.ALL goodness of fit tests presented in published work in the 20th century show that the probability distributions are not even half way close to being even approximately Normal .
Walsh ,similarly,shows the connections between the investment strategy and philosophy of the " later " Keynes, who had finally realized the immense damage to the economy caused by speculators, and those of Graham and Buffett( Soros is also very close to Keynes in his understanding of the impacts of uncertainty on financial decision making as well as having realized the severe damages inflicted on the economy by speculation.Both Soros and Keynes finally understood the ancient wisdom of Adam Smith in this area). I have deducted one half star because Walsh appears not to realize that all of Keynes's insights into financial decision making arise from Keynes's discussions of decision making in the TP.Keynes was the first to put forth an explicit ,formal mathematical analysis of " safety first" considerations in decision making in chapters 26 and 29 of the TP.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
The book really isn't about Keynes and the market,
By Unsatisfied (Redwood City, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Keynes and the Market: How the World's Greatest Economist Overturned Conventional Wisdom and Made a Fortune on the Stock Market (Hardcover)
As one of the above reviewers point out, you learn very little about Keynes in this book. Instead, the author puts together a hodgepodge if investment tidbits that tie very loosely together.
If you're not at all familiar w/investments, this book may be of mild interest. Otherwise, I would strongly suggest against it. I learned much more about Keynes and investing in Barton Biggs' Hedgehogging
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