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Fractal Market Analysis: Applying Chaos Theory to Investment and Economics (Hardcover)

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3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

The average investor is usually unaware of the theoretical bases and academic underpinnings of various investment strategies. Investment books and popular reference guides barely mention efficient market or random walk theory, and the mathematical aspect of portfolio management theory appears as little more than a footnote. Little actually new has been added to the field of investment and market theory for the last 30 years, but recently Peters introduced the landmark Chaos and Order in the Capital Markets (1991). Chaos theory is a branch of mathematics that, despite its name, attempts to make order out of seemingly random events and that has found application in the natural sciences. Market chaologists, as they have come to be known, have marshaled an array of formulas and computer models but have been criticized for not being able to explain their ideas in practical terms or to demonstrate how to apply these ideas. Fractals are the main mathematical tool of chaos theory, and Peters now shows how these can be applied to financial markets and trading. This book is unquestionably complex and relatively expensive, but all libraries with investment collections should consider purchasing at least one copy. David Rouse


Product Description

A leading pioneer in the field offers practical applications of this innovative science. Peters describes complex concepts in an easy-to-follow manner for the non-mathematician. He uses fractals, rescaled range analysis and nonlinear dynamical models to explain behavior and understand price movements. These are specific tools employed by chaos scientists to map and measure physical and now, economic phenomena.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (January 12, 1994)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0471585246
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471585244
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #390,363 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #40 in  Books > Science > Mathematics > Pure Mathematics > Fractals
    #81 in  Books > Business & Investing > Economics > Public Finance

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Edgar E. Peters
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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Almost useless, January 25, 2000
By A Customer
In this book, Peters explains general capital market in an interesting way; but when he gets into the Fractals - the main theme of the book, he seems to just pick things up from previous research papers and condenses them. At the end of the day you will be wondering if it is worthwhile to purchase and read the book after all.

On the editing side, I think Wiley could have done better. The math in the book is typeset in a programming language style and you have to give extra effort in order to read them.

The three stars is for being one of the very few works available in this field.

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47 of 54 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Superficial, mystical, factually incorrect at times., August 3, 1999
By A Customer
I am very disappointed with this book. In spite of the trendy words "fractal" and "chaos" the field of nonlinear dynamical systems is not new, and this book is reminiscent of a cursory overview of an advanced undergraduate mathematics class in time series analysis.

The book also contains statements which are simply untrue. For example (p.19) The author claims that "Upon discovering this 'statistical memory' (inherent in a game of single-deck blackjack), casinos responded by using multiple decks, ... thus eliminating the memory". This is simply wrong, the statistical memory still exists in multiple-deck blackjack, and is exploited by blackjack players every day.

Even worse, the "Fractal Market Hypothesis" itself is stated in such a general and ill-defined manner that you may be left wondering what exactly the hypothesis is. There are certainly problems with the traditional efficient market hypothesis, but this is no excuse for mystical hand-waving about "fractals".

The useful information in the book could be written in a pamphlet of a few pages at most. Good luck.

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35 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hands down the best book on finance I have ever read., September 15, 1996
By A Customer
Reviewed by Michael P. Corning

Edgar E. Peters wasn't satisfied with the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH). With the publication of his first book, Chaos and Order in Capital Markets, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1991, he went public with his concerns about its underlying assumptions and with its empirical shortcomings. That book, a manifesto really, was followed last year by Fractal Market Analysis: Applying Chaos Theory to Investment & Economics (FMA). Where his first book broke ground, FMA has laid the foundation of a new conceptual infrastructure of capital markets.

Risk From The Past
Much of Peters argument is based on two things: one hundred three years of daily Dow Jones Industrial Average data, and Rescaled Range (R/S) analysis. He begins FMA by demonstrating that capital market returns in the United States are not a truly random walk. Instead, he contends they are a biased random walk and indicate a long memory process; they are persistent. Specifically. he characterizes their short term behavior (less than 1,200 days) as a stochastic nonlinear process and their long term behavior as a nonlinear dynamic, or chaotic, process. As a result, he enlarges the definition of risk to include a phenomenon he discovered about persistent processes: they are mirrored by antipersistent ones. If persistent processes are less random than random ones, antipersistent processes reverse themselves more often than random ones. An early insight due to this discovery is that risk in not merely the deviation from an expected value, viz., standard deviation, but the velocity of the second difference of price changes.

Peters offers the Stable-Levy, or fractal, frequency distribution as a more faithful representation of capital markets. When two key variables are fixed at certain levels, the normal distribution becomes a special case of fractal distributions. To hear that the random walk is a special case should be no more surprising than to hear that visible light is a special case of the electromagnetic spectrum. It is not so much a matter of losing something; instead, vast amounts of knowledge remain invisible as long as the old assumption remains intact and tools tuned to the different frequencies remain undeveloped. Instruments tuned to gamma, X-ray, infrared, and radio frequencies have shown astronomers far more about our universe than the special case of visible light ever could.

Both these facts, that finance time series are not random and that the Gaussian assumption is a special case of fractal distributions, suggest that:
1. major rethinking about risk and diversification is necessary,
2. new statistical tools need to be created, and
3. very exciting discoveries are in store for us.

Risk in the Present
While examining the same historic data at different time scales, Peters made another discovery. He found that the frequency distributions of investment horizons ranging from 1-day to 90-day intervals had the same shape. As a result, he concluded that capital markets do not have a characteristic time scale (an important attribute of fractal systems). Instead, he suggested that this phenomenon represented what he called "self-similar risk."

In Peters' view, investors don't struggle against each other trying to attain an above average rate of return (at the expense of the seller) as much as they sustain each other and diversify each other's risk by keeping the market liquid. As long as long-term investors remain long-term investors, they are willing to step in and buy securities that are unwanted by traders on shorter investment horizons.

Risk of the Future
In spite of the highest discipline, crashes happen. The EMH demurs. Crashes and stampedes are not efficient concepts. Copernicus had a similar problem. By placing the Sun at the center of the solar system, he was able to explain the wandering behavior of the planets-except for Mars.

The EMH finds itself in a similar predicament. As long as it clings to its simplifying assumptions like a jealous lover, it will never be able to explain why crashes and stampedes happen. The FMH, on the other hand, not explains why, it begins to construct a world view which explains how they happen, as well.

In the long term, Peters conjectures, capital markets behave like nonlinear dynamic systems. Their time series have all the requisite attributes; among them, sensitivity to initial conditions, and a fractal dimension. In addition, through the use of R/S analysis, Peters can identify the nonperiodic cycles, known in chaos theory as attractors, so characteristic of chaotic systems.

It may be this latter feature that will have the greatest impact on our understanding of risk and our techniques to minimize it. Though he does not explicitly suggest it in Fractal Market Analysis, he has speculated in earlier papers that sufficient understanding of the nonlinear dynamics of capital markets may provide a theoretic basis for market timing and tactical asset allocation.

Final Thoughts
I conclude this review with a few of my own comments about risk.

First, we risk making two types of errors when faced with a new and provocative world view. Type I: We too quickly appropriate a new idea or theory. Type II: We too quickly dismiss a new idea or theory. With Type I errors we agree without understanding; with Type II: we disagree without appreciating. The former is naive, the latter is insolent. With Type I errors we are not fully utilizing our critical faculties; with Type II errors we are forgetting our intuitive. Ignorance is non-market risk. We have an obligation to our clients to diversify it away, and the best way to do that is with an open and critical mind.

Finally, at the risk of overstating it, I would have to describe both of Peters' books as inspired. I say that because they not only informed me, they enlightened me. They changed the way I see the world, and they affected me at an emotional level. I have never before encountered a book at once so intellectually demanding and accessible. For me, the measure of a great book is taken in the number of times I return to it and the degree of new understanding each reading yields for me. In my library, Peters has few peers.

Readers interested in a more in-depth discussion of Fractal Market Analysis can find it on the World Wide Web at http://www.oara.org/mpc/fma/.

Michael P. Corning is the Quality Assurance Officer at Chuck Jones & Associates, Inc., Portland, Oregon. The opinions expressed in this review are his alone and not necessarily those of Chuck Jones & Associates, Inc.

This review was taken from a complete review first published in the Journal of Financial Planning, October, 1995

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Gets you up and running with chaos theory for time series
This book includes a very detailed description of how to apply some chaos theory techniques - primarily R/S analysis - to time series data. Read more
Published on March 22, 2004

1.0 out of 5 stars This book is a disappointment
As a market analyst for an oil company, I spend considerable effort in trying to find new ways and theories to "decode" the markets and overcome uncertainty. Read more
Published on February 13, 2002 by Aleksandar Krainer

4.0 out of 5 stars Good for newcomers to FMA
I have found Mr. Peters book excellent. I am no mathematician and still I found it easy to read. I was interested in learning about fractal market analysis and I found what I... Read more
Published on July 5, 2001 by plh1@telcel.net.ve

4.0 out of 5 stars simple as possible intro to fractals and markets
The title only indicates part of the true subject matter of this book. The book teaches about fractal analysis of any data set, and uses financial markets as special cases to... Read more
Published on September 14, 1999 by slmpeep@surfnetcorp.com

5.0 out of 5 stars THE book for your money in the market
The author has excellent experiences in all kinds of markets and true understanding of how to put them all together. Read more
Published on June 10, 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars The best reference I've seen for the non-statistician.
This, the second of Edgar Peter's books advancing and investigating an advanced market view, is clearly the best reference I've seen that is still mostly comprehensible to someone... Read more
Published on February 23, 1999

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