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The Quants: How a New Breed of Math Whizzes Nearly Destroyed the World's Financial Markets

“Beware of geeks bearing formulas.” --Warren Buffett  In March of 2006, the world’s richest men sipped champagne in an opulent New York hotel....more
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few weeks ago
Reviewed in Japanese at Amazon.co.jp.
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few weeks ago
Wow. Stunning insight into some of the key personalities behind the Money Grid.
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Ray
few weeks ago
Very good historical summary of quantitative analysis, quants and the financial markets. Opening with the early quants, Patterson quickly moves through explanations ranging from Black Scholes to the application of technology and probability to financial markets. Excellent summaries of a fascinating band of characters from Claude Shannon and Information theory to physicists counting cards in Vegas...more
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few weeks ago
This is a pretty amazing book if you're interested in what caused the meltdown in 2008. Explains all about credit default swaps, why they were created and why the men who made them thought they were fool proof. Really cool timeline of how everything got out of control starting in the 50's and the first computer traders.
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few weeks ago
I'm not known by any of my peers, friends or famioy as interested in, or adept with, finances but I really enjoyed this book. It tells the tale of the 2007 market meltdown and the men that helped to create it. The personal glimpses of Cliff Asness, Ken Griffins, Peter Muller and Boaz Weinstein brought the book to life, reading like something out of "Bonfire of the Vanities". Highly recommend.
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few weeks ago
Started great and was very enjoyable, but Patterson seemed to be a little too enamored of the Quants themselves. Also, I felt he did a poor job tying his history of quantitative finance to the mortgage meltdown, which was his professed purpose in writing the book; were the Quants right? Lucky? Were they malicious? Were they just a tool used inappropriately by the big banks? Patterson never...more
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few weeks ago
Scary stuff. If you wonder why the financial crisis happened here's a look at part of the problem. If you are questioning whether reform needs to happen on deriviatives you need to read this as well.
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few weeks ago
Not bad, but not exceptional. There is so much excellent,investigative and analytical writing on the most-recent financial crisis that this one drops to the bottom of the pile. I enjoyed it, but would recommend Gillian Tett, Kate Kelly or Michael Lewis well ahead of this one.
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few weeks ago
Overall, the book “The Quants” is entertaining and enjoyable while conceptual-heavy in the first half with valuable references to technical books, papers, and pioneers that eventually gave the birth to the quants. Stories of Wall Street heavy-weights, such as Warren Buffett and Bill Gross, from different periods of time are marvelously linked together around Ed Thorp, Ken Griffin, Peter...more
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few weeks ago
I found this book interesting, but there's no chance it'll ever be on the NY Times bestseller list.
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