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Nonlinear Pricing: Theory & Applications (Wiley Trading)
 
 
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Nonlinear Pricing: Theory & Applications (Wiley Trading) (Hardcover)

~ (Author) "Almost everything you believe about characterizing financial-economic relationships is wrong..." (more)
Key Phrases: homogenous power laws, antipersistent time series, partial predictability, Wall Street, New York, Kevin Kallaugher (more...)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"A lively and intriguing book from a writer who can range from Zen to mathematics." -- Adam Smith, author of The Money Game and Paper Money

"A lively and intriguing book from a writer who can range from Zen to mathematics."-Adam Smith, author of The Money Game and Paper Money

"Nonlinear Pricing is an eminently readable book which I found satisfied both the theorist and the practitioner in me. For the theorist, there are new insights into the relationship between complexity and the markets. For the practitioner, there are practical ideas on how to fashion investment strategies. I highly recommend Nonlinear Pricing to all students of the markets."-Edgar E. Peters, Chief Investment Strategist, PanAgora Asset Management; author, Chaos and Order in the Capital Markets

"Nonlinear Pricing goes further than any book I am aware of in drawing a connection between the real world of economics and the new ideas about economics coming from the science of self-organized systems. Written in a lively, informal style, this is a wonderful read for those of us who have been wondering whether anyone understands anything at all about how markets work."-Lee Smolin, PhD, Department of Physics, Pennsylvania State University

"Required reading for the enlightened financial professional. Enjoyable for the intelligent investor. A dash of physics, bite-sized pieces of nonlinear concepts, and a broth of hands-on experience make this a cookbook for the modern trader."-Richard E. Morley, Potts Medal recipient and founder of the Breakfast Club

"A real eye-opener-Nonlinear Pricing explains a complex subject in easy terms and makes the reader aware of the many opportunities offered by this new technology." -Richard Olsen, founder, Olsen and Associates, Zurich

"I, of course, think highly of this book as it credits Dance of the Money Bees with inventing 'swarm theory', now a discipline in computer science. There are many other splendid insights." -John Train, author and President of the Montrose Fund

"An extraordinary tour d'horizon, this book challenges conventional thinking about finance, investing, and much else besides. Brimming with ideas and eye-opening connections, it makes a powerful case for our need to understand the extent to which nonlinearity shapes our lives." -Andrew Freeman, Managing Editor, Financial Services, The Economist Intelligence Unit; co-author, Seeing Tomorrow: Rewriting the Rules of Risk

"Nonlinear Pricing: Theory & Application by Christopher T. May makes nice reading even for people like me who are not economists. This is an ambitious book as it presents economics starting from fundamental physics. It deserves a large readership." -Ilya Prigogine, 1977 Nobel Laureate, Chemistry; author, The End of Certainty; and the world's foremost non-equilibrium scientist

"A real eye-opener - Nonlinear Pricing explains a complex subject in easy terms and makes the reader aware of the many opportunities offered by this new technology." -- Richard Olsen, founder, Olsen and Associates, Zurich

"An extraordinary tour d'horizon, this book challenges conventional thinking about finance, investing, and much else besides. Brimming with ideas and eye-opening connections, it makes a powerful case for our need to understand the extent to which nonlinearity shapes our lives." -- Andrew Freeman, Managing Editor, Financial Services, The Economist Intelligence Unit; co-author, Seeing Tomorrow: Rewriting the Rules of Risk

"I, of course, think highly of this book as it credits Dance of the Money Bees with inventing "swarm theory", now a discipline in computer science. There are many other splendid insights." -- John Train, author and President of the Montrose Fund

"Nonlinear Pricing goes further than any book I am aware of in drawing a connection between the real world of economics and the new ideas about economics coming from the science of self-organized systems. Written in a lively, informal style, this is a wonderful read for those of us who have been wondering whether anyone understands anything at all about how markets work." -- Lee Smolin, PhD, Department of Physics, Pennsylvania State University

"Nonlinear Pricing is an eminently readable book which I found satisfied both the theorist and the practitioner in me. For the theorist, there are new insights into the relationship between complexity and the markets. For the practitioner, there are practical ideas on how to fashion investment strategies. I highly recommend Nonlinear Pricing to all students of the markets." -- Edgar E. Peters, Chief Investment Strategist, PanAgora Asset Management; author, Chaos and Order in the Capital Markets

"Nonlinear Pricing: Theory & Application by Christopher T. May makes nice reading even for people like me who are not economists. This is an ambitious book as it presents economics starting from fundamental physics. It deserves a large readership." -- Ilya Prigogine, 1977 Nobel Laureate, Chemistry; author, The End of Certainty; and the world's foremost non-equilibrium scientist

"Required reading for the enlightened financial professional. Enjoyable for the intelligent investor. A dash of physics, bite-sized pieces of nonlinear concepts, and a broth of hands-on experience make this a cookbook for the modern trader." -- Richard E. Morley, Potts Medal recipient and founder of the Breakfast Club


Product Description

In a totally new way of looking at financial economics, Nonlinear Pricing abandons the traditional assumptions of equilibrium in economics and randomness in a time-series. These shortcomings are becoming increasingly awkward given a superior technological infrastructure and advances in mathematics and the sciences. Despite these advances and their empirical proof, much remains confused or muddled. In this groundbreaking new book, leading hedge fund manager Christopher T. May explores the nature and role of nonlinearity, an inherent part of everyday reality, and illustrates a profit-making strategy.

One of the many striking applications of nonlinear technology in recent years, nonlinear pricing uses cutting-edge technology to identify and exploit patterns hidden within the seemingly helter-skelter rise and fall of daily stock prices. Nonlinear Pricing sheds much needed light on the principles behind this innovative view of reality and provides clear explanations of how it is employed to predict—at least partially—the unpredictable.

Beginning with an incisive introduction to the topic, May presents the roots of nonlinearity through the examples of calendrics, geometry, and music. He then illustrates the application and integration of various nonlinear technologies, including genetic algorithms, fuzzy logic, fractal imaging, and nonlinear dynamics, to such essentials as trading strategies, asset allocation, risk management, and derivative pricing and hedging. Along with practical methodologies and a wealth of real-world examples, this comprehensive resource contains a glossary of terms, a bibliography, and in-depth information on:

  • Fractal analysis—power law distributions, fractional Brownian motion, and their relationships
  • The Hurst Exponent—the KAOS screen and its practical implementation
  • Resonance—time domain versus frequency domain, Brownian motion, and the Gaussian distribution
  • Advanced concepts—Soros's Reflexivity, nonequilibrium economics, kernel of theoretical nonlinear pricing, May's Law, resolution and resonance.

"Nonlinear Pricing is an eminently readable book which I found satisfied both the theorist and the practitioner in me. For the theorist, there are new insights into the relationship between complexity and the markets. For the practitioner, there are practical ideas on how to fashion investment strategies. I highly recommend Nonlinear Pricing to all students of the markets."—Edgar E. Peters, Chief Investment Strategist, PanAgora Asset Management; author, Chaos and Order in the Capital Markets.

"Nonlinear Pricing goes further than any book I am aware of in drawing a connection between the real world of economics and the new ideas about economics coming from the science of self-organized systems. Written in a lively, informal style, this is a wonderful read for those of us who have been wondering whether anyone understands anything at all about how markets work."—Lee Smolin, PhD, Department of Physics, Pennsylvania State University.

"Required reading for the enlightened financial professional. Enjoyable for the intelligent investor. A dash of physics, bite-sized pieces of nonlinear concepts, and a broth of hands-on experience make this a cookbook for the modern trader."—Richard E. Morley, Potts Medal recipient and founder of the Breakfast Club.

"A real eye-opener—Nonlinear Pricing explains a complex subject in easy terms and makes the reader aware of the many opportunities offered by this new technology."—Richard Olsen, founder, Olsen and Associates, Zurich.

"I, of course, think highly of this book as it credits Dance of the Money Bees with inventing 'swarm theory,' now a discipline in computer science. There are many other splendid insights."—John Train, author and President of the Montrose Fund

"An extraordinary tour d'horizon, this book challenges conventional thinking about finance, investing, and much else besides. Brimming with ideas and eye-opening connections, it makes a powerful case for our need to understand the extent to which nonlinearity shapes our lives."—Andrew Freeman, Managing Editor, Financial Services, The Economist Intelligence Unit; coauthor, Seeing Tomorrow: Rewriting the Rules of Risk.

"Nonlinear Pricing: Theory & Applications by Christopher T. May makes nice reading even for people like me who are not economists. This is an ambitious book as it presents economics starting from fundamental physics. It deserves a large readership."—Ilya Prigogine, 1977 Nobel Laureate, Chemistry; author, The End of Certainty; and world's foremost non-equilibrium scientist.

Written by one of the few practitioners using this breakthrough methodology to trade the markets successfully, Nonlinear Pricing fills an important niche in investment literature. It is a must read for anyone seeking to understand—and capitalize on—twenty-first century financial economics.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 361 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (February 8, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0471245518
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471245513
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.4 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,624,820 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Christopher T. May
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Customer Reviews

20 Reviews
5 star:
 (7)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (1)
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 (8)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
28 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Contains no substance or even one concrete idea, February 1, 2000
By A Customer
Very poor treatment of the topic. The author doesn't seem to know where the nonlinearity lies in "Nonlinear Pricing". He sees it "everywhere". One wonders whether he even knows the difference between a linear and a nonlinear function, and if so why he seems to think that a Gaussian distribution pertains to "linear", and anything else to nonlinear. It is clear that his understanding of mathematics is at best vague; unfortunately not even his concepts bear much merit. "Genetic", "Fuzzy", "Non-equilibrium" are simply used as buzzwords to create the air of being mathematically-sophisticated (the mathematical community knows that "genetic algorithms" are essentially a characterization of "stabbing in the dark" in the absence of a better search procedure, or often, of knowledge). He even dares to toy with concepts from physics which he can't even start to fathom.

I see some readers fairly impressed with the book. If you don't have much understanding of math and the fundamental sciences, you might be. But you'll also be left with no understanding at the end of the day ( you might attribute the lack of understanding to your background in "humanities", but it will really be because the book has no substance ).

With his writing style, the author could perhaps have given Deepak Chopra a run for his money had he concentrated more on the religious part and had he sounded less cocky. Only religion/metaphysics would marvel at the unsubstantiated rhetoric one finds in this book. However, this is scientific ground he is attempting to tread on.

Just read Mandelbrot's original book ...

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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Hand Waving and Puffery, January 7, 2000
The book can be summarized in 11 words: "Genetic fractal neural fuzzy chaotic nonlinear stuff good. Traditional finance bad."

There is no real information in the book. There are unsupported anecdotes and a myriad of quotes from non-financial sources. The lack of substance in the text leads one to suspect that the author himself doesn't understand the underlying mathematics himself.

For a better source, Chapter 12 of Econometrics of Financial Markets by Campbell, Lo and MacKinlay has more information on nonlinear modelling than the whole of this book (and it has a couple hundred pages on traditional financial economics.)

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Ego trip with virtually no useful baggage, March 30, 2001
By "christopher_nguyen" (Redwood Shores, CA United States) - See all my reviews
If you're looking for a good primer in fractal economics, do not waste your money, or worse, time with this book. You can get more information and less noise from E. Peters's "Chaos and Order in the Capital Markets". The most useful information you'll get from this book is a description of the Hurst exponent; the rest is, well...

I don't mind random musings with an articulate friend after dinner, but please don't do it in a pedagogical-sounding, inflated tome. Let the quotes describe themselves:

"... this chapter will present a challenge because it exists at a rarified level of understanding."

"I maintain, as any good scientist does, that the theory must fit the facts".

"The mathematics in this chapter may be complex to the financial economics professional" (I found the series summation as the most complex math in that chapter.)

Errors and carelessness are so prevalent, this book really brings down my opinion of the JW editors. Concepts of dependent and independent variables are mixed up, atrocious-looking graphs of normal and Levy distributions are shown, notations like "m2" are printed instead of "m(superscript)2" to mean m-squared, etc.

Most of the time is spent waxing philosophical connections among shallowly described concepts like Fourier transform, superstrings, the scriptures, Brownian motion, Socratic logic, etc. To be fair, if this sort of shooting-the-breeze provides a relaxing read for you, this book might fit the bill.

The author breathlessly describes "original concepts" like fixing risk for varying returns in security portfolios: this is already done with instruments like mortgage securities.

Perhaps the author's own quotation of Occam's Razor should have been heeded, "That which is not needed should not be included".

I did find the Bloomberg KAOS screen description on page 128 useful. If you use Bloomberg, you can also get that from the manuals.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars Completely Useless
Optimistically I bought this book expecting an insight into non-linear models of price behvaiour, maybe some thoughts I could use to flesh out my own experience - a peek into... Read more
Published on September 10, 2001 by James Doherty

1.0 out of 5 stars Not worthy to present itself as a serious work
I expect that I am not the only reader to conclude that Christopher May has only a cursory grasp of nonlinearity. Read more
Published on September 6, 2001 by JMD

3.0 out of 5 stars How not to title a book.
If ever there were a book that was tough to title this would be it. Nominally, Nonlinear Pricing should be a dry treatise on macro economics or perhaps something in the micro... Read more
Published on December 7, 1999

4.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating on financial markets and new methods of analysis
This is a fascinating book, written by a financial markets practitioner who has come to terms with the fact that most of the ways in which he has been taught to look at investment... Read more
Published on August 28, 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars Integrating various modern approaches to financial markets
Chaos theory, genetic algorithms, neural networks, fuzzy logic etc. are all keywords in modern financial markets theory. Read more
Published on August 17, 1999

1.0 out of 5 stars Bad. Really bad.
Rambling, erroneous, unfocused, nonrigorous, ultimately pointless. A very big disappointment. Don't think for a minute that this book will help you to make money. Read more
Published on August 16, 1999

4.0 out of 5 stars Kuhn meet May; paradigm shifts are nonlinear
Someday in the not too distant future, nonlinearity will be an unquestioned first principle in the metaphysics of nature, man, mind, and the markets. Read more
Published on August 4, 1999 by Katherine Burr (hanseatic@abq.com)

1.0 out of 5 stars statistical error + babble = useless
In the excerpt on this website he says that the distribution of stock returns does not touch the horizontal axis in either tail and infers that the variance is thus infinite. Read more
Published on July 28, 1999

2.0 out of 5 stars Would not spend the time/money on it again
I was/am looking for a good book about the topic of nonlinearities and the limitations of standard finance theory. This book isn't it. One reviewer said he's redundant. Read more
Published on July 19, 1999

1.0 out of 5 stars Redundant, superficial, innacurate and expensive!
I was truly disappointed with this book.

The book is highly redundant. The author keeps repeating the same things over and over again. Read more

Published on June 17, 1999

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