Inventing Money: Difference between revisions

From The Jolly Contrarian
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{review|Inventing Money: The Story of [[Long-Term Capital Management]] and the Legends Behind It|Nicholas Dunbar|April 11, 2000|On pride, haughty spirits, etc.}}
{{a|book review|}}{{br|Inventing Money: The Story of Long-Term Capital Management and the Legends Behind It}}<br>
{{author|Nicholas Dunbar}}<br>
First published on April 11, 2000
===On pride, haughty spirits, etc.===


I was prompted into buying this book after seeing a truly hopeless Channel 4 documentary about the [[LTCM]] collapse which attempted — but failed entirely — to explain what LTCM was all about: What the [[Black-Scholes option pricing model]] did, how Meriwether and cohorts used it to make money, and how they managed to singlehandedly bring western world as we know it to the brink of financial collapse with a formula which is supposed to completely eliminate risk.  
I was prompted into buying this book after seeing a truly hopeless Channel 4 documentary about the [[LTCM]] collapse which attempted — but failed entirely — to explain what LTCM was all about: What the [[Black-Scholes option pricing model]] did, how Meriwether and cohorts used it to make money, and how they managed to singlehandedly bring western world as we know it to the brink of financial collapse with a formula which is supposed to completely eliminate risk.  

Latest revision as of 12:28, 13 January 2021

The Jolly Contrarian’s book review service™
Index: Click to expand:
Tell me more
Sign up for our newsletter — or just get in touch: for ½ a weekly 🍺 you get to consult JC. Ask about it here.

Inventing Money: The Story of Long-Term Capital Management and the Legends Behind It
Nicholas Dunbar
First published on April 11, 2000

On pride, haughty spirits, etc.

I was prompted into buying this book after seeing a truly hopeless Channel 4 documentary about the LTCM collapse which attempted — but failed entirely — to explain what LTCM was all about: What the Black-Scholes option pricing model did, how Meriwether and cohorts used it to make money, and how they managed to singlehandedly bring western world as we know it to the brink of financial collapse with a formula which is supposed to completely eliminate risk.

Dunbar's very readable book scores on two fronts: firstly, it succeeds in explaining how these putatively “risk free” trades manage to make profit and be (to 'all' intents and purposes) perfectly hedged, when conventional wisdom would suggest that a perfectly hedged position must by definition be 'flat', and secondly, it serves as an excellent primer for anyone wanting to understand how the debt markets in general, and credit derivatives in particular, work. And all this in a little over 200 pages.

The subject matter isn’t easy, but nor (at the level to which Dunbar takes it) is it rocket science, and to his immense credit Dunbar manages to resist the temptation to write it off as 'baffling rocket science by Harvard Graduates which is far too hard for the stupid reader to understand' (which is what said Channel 4 documentary did) or to insert impenetrable graphs, equations and formulae to show just how clever he and the LTCM sort of person is.

Still, while the casual observer of the Stock Market (you know, the sort who watches the news each night to see if it went up or down) might find little in this book to light their candle, those in the industry and short on specific knowledge, or with aspirations of getting into it, could hardly find a better place to start.

See also