The Art of Expectations: A Simple Way To Predict Outcomes Using Expectations

The Art of Expectations: A Simple Way To Predict Outcomes Using Expectations

by
4.08 of 5 stars 4.08  ·  rating details  ·  12 ratings  ·  4 reviews
The Art of Expectations is a new perspective on forecasting markets. Includes how to construct and track the Expectations Indicator which provides an objective approach to making investment decisions.
BR> You will learn three things in "The Art of Expectations"
BR> 1. How expectations influence our decisions and shape our world and the world around us.
2. How to use...more
Paperback, 138 pages
Published September 14th 2011 by Lou Ebner
more details... edit details

Friend Reviews

To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
This book is not yet featured on Listopia. Add this book to your favorite list »

Community Reviews

(showing 1-30 of 169)
filter  |  sort: default (?)  |  rating details
Jeremiah
The Art of Expectations wasn't exactly what I expected. It's more of a short essay that comes in at 131 pages. Its style is quite colloquial, making it an easy, concise read. That being said, the entire back cover points towards a book that will give you the answers to why the stock market goes up and down and how to construct a new Stock Market Expectations Indicator. Unfortunately, the author spends the first eighty pages or so of the book discussing much of Gustave Le Bon's research on crowd...more
Kai
The Art of Expectations started with with human nature. Things that definite us and what is expected of us. It also gives the readers of what makes a leader and how the groups can influence the leader or vice versa. By understanding our expectation, the theory is applied to the stock market how what we can expect and which way the stock market will move based on what we know.

It even gives a step by step on how to predict the stock market. Whenever expectation has reached its limit, we can expec...more
Dianna
As a econ and math major, I suppose I'm not really the target audience for this book. It does manage to put a lot of concepts in decision and probability theory in terms that the average, interested reader should understand, but my fear with this book is that I think it oversimplifies both in a way that might be a bit misleading to those who think this amount of foundation is enough to start predicting the patterns of the stock market.
Alex Clair
With Great, Double-Dip and Global Recessions, I highly recommend this to get set for the 2013-2014 roller-coaster ride. The US and EU put teh kabosh on China and Brazil but this too shall pass. Perfect with my morning coffee!
Deuce
Nov 13, 2012 Deuce marked it as to-read
Cindie
Aug 26, 2012 Cindie is currently reading it
ʚɞ Soli
Jul 17, 2012 ʚɞ Soli is currently reading it
Emily L.
Nov 26, 2012 Emily L. marked it as to-read
Julie Jarvis Barker
Jul 12, 2012 Julie Jarvis Barker marked it as to-read
Shelves: first-reads
Destiny Esper
Jul 09, 2012 Destiny Esper marked it as to-read
Danielle Joy
Jul 07, 2012 Danielle Joy marked it as to-read
Lacey Starkey
Jul 07, 2012 Lacey Starkey marked it as to-read
Norman Secrest
Jul 07, 2012 Norman Secrest marked it as to-read
Kathleen
Jul 07, 2012 Kathleen marked it as to-read
Felina
Jul 07, 2012 Felina marked it as to-read
Shari
Jul 07, 2012 Shari marked it as to-read
Benjamin
Jul 07, 2012 Benjamin marked it as to-read
Stephanie Watson
Jul 07, 2012 Stephanie Watson marked it as to-read
Nichole
Jul 07, 2012 Nichole marked it as to-read
Margaret
Jul 07, 2012 Margaret marked it as to-read
Elaine Pratt
Jul 07, 2012 Elaine Pratt marked it as to-read
Sara
Jul 07, 2012 Sara marked it as to-read
Holly Tierney-Bedord
Jul 07, 2012 Holly Tierney-Bedord marked it as to-read
Rusty
Jul 07, 2012 Rusty marked it as to-read
Loreli
Jul 07, 2012 Loreli marked it as to-read
« previous 1 3 4 5 6 next »
There are no discussion topics on this book yet. Be the first to start one »
5448536
Louis J Ebner III retired from the finance industry to be a stay at home dad. During the financial crisis of 2008 he set out to discover a more objective way of forecasting financial markets, reminded of an subjective industry that time after time destroy their clients wealth. He has raised his two boys with a life principle “we are capable of anything we put our minds to.”
More about Louis J. Ebner III...

Share This Book

Your website