The Physics of Wall Street: a brief History of Predicting the Unpredictable
Download 3.76 Kb. Pdf ko'rish
|
6408d7cd421a4-the-physics-of-wall-street
Swimming Upstream
• 41 osborne presented his research with an engineer’s confidence. He published “Brownian Motion in the Stock Market” in a journal called Operations Research. It was not an economics journal, but enough economists and economically minded mathematicians read it that os- borne’s research quickly garnered attention. Some of this was positive, but it was not unambiguously so. Indeed, when osborne published his first paper on finance, he was unaware of Bachelier or Samuelson, or any of a handful of economists who had, in one way or another, anticipated the idea that stock prices are random. Many economists pointed out his lack of originality — so many that osborne was forced to publish a second paper just a few months after the first, in which he presented a brief history of the idea that markets are random, giving full credit to Bachelier for coming up with the idea first, but also de- fending his own formulation. osborne stood his ground, and rightfully so. despite connections with earlier work, his papers on randomness in the stock market were sufficiently original that Samuelson later gave him credit for develop- ing the modern version of the random walk hypothesis at the same time that Samuelson and his students were working on it. More im- portantly still, osborne approached his model as a true empirical scientist, trained to handle data. He developed and applied a series of statistical tests designed to corroborate his version of the Brown- ian motion model. other researchers, such as the statistician Maurice Kendall, who in 1953 showed that stock prices were as likely to go up as to go down, had done empirical work on the randomness of stock prices. But osborne was the first to demonstrate the importance of the log-normal distribution to markets. He was also the first to clearly articulate a model for how stock market randomness worked and how it could be used to derive probabilities for future prices (and rates of return), all while providing convincing data that this particular model of the markets captured how markets really behave. And despite the early reservations about osborne’s originality, economists soon recog- nized that he brought theory and evidence together in a way that sim- ply hadn’t been done before. When Paul cootner at MIt collected the most important papers on the random walk hypothesis for his 1964 volume — the volume that contained the first english translation of Bachelier’s thesis—he included two papers by osborne. one was the 1959 paper on Brownian motion; the other was a paper that expanded on and generalized the earlier work. By the time osborne began thinking about markets, he had published fifteen papers in physics and related topics. He had held a permanent position at the nrL for a decade and a half and had rubbed shoul- ders with some of the best physicists of the mid-twentieth century, as both colleague and correspondent. And yet, osborne still didn’t have a Phd, in physics or in anything else. He had left grad school in 1941 to join the nrL without finishing his degree. on one level, a doctorate didn’t mean much for a person like osborne; he had a fulfilling career in physics even without a doctorate, and no one seemed to doubt his credentials as a researcher. His work spoke for itself. He decided, how- ever, during the mid-fifties, that he wanted to finish his degree, at least in part because it would guarantee him a promotion at the nrL. And so osborne followed many of his colleagues at the nrL to the physics department at the University of Maryland. there he could finish his graduate work without giving up his position at the lab. osborne’s first attempt at a dissertation was on a topic in astronomy. (Usually graduate students write a dissertation proposal. osborne ig- nored this step. He wrote entire dissertations.) He brought the dis- sertation to the physics department head, who promptly rejected it because too many people were interested in the topic and osborne’s research wasn’t original enough. So osborne wrote a second disserta- tion, based on his research on the stock market. the department head rejected this, too, on the grounds that it wasn’t physics. As osborne would later put it, “You are supposed to do original research, but if you get too original, they don’t know what’s going on.” Stock market research may have been acceptable work for a physicist within the gov- ernment research community, where applied work of any stripe was highly valued. But it still wasn’t “physics” from the perspective of a tra- ditional academic department. And so, though osborne was received more favorably by the scientific community than Bachelier, he was still something of a maverick for working on financial modeling. 42 • t h e p h y s i c s o f wa l l s t r e e t |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling