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Capital Ideas and Market Realities: Option Replication, Investor Behavior, and Stock Market Crashes

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In Capital Ideas and Market Realities , Bruce Jacobs sifts through the history of modern finance, from the efficient market hypothesis to behavioral psychology and chaos theory, to determine the cause of recent market crashes. He finds that some investment strategies, especially those based on theories that ignore the human element, tend to self-destruct, and can take markets down with them. Ironically, it is often those strategies that purport to reduce the risk of investing that can pose the greatest danger. Of particular concern are trading strategies based on the Nobel Prize-winning option pricing model. This model gave rise to option replication, a technique for synthesizing the payoffs to an option by trading between the underlying asset and cash. Replication requires selling as stock prices decline and buying as stock prices rise. When enough money follows this type of trend-following "dynamic hedging," bubbles and crashes can result. In 1987, trading related to an option replication strategy known as "portfolio insurance" led to the largest crash in U.S. market history. Today, similarly mechanistic trading underlies trillions of dollars in exchange-traded and over-the-counter options and swaps, as well as myriad institutional and retail products designed to provide investors with excess returns at low or no risk. Capital Ideas and Market Realities uncovers the risks these strategies pose for market stability and investor wealth. The book has also become a lightning rod in the debate over the need for better investment product risk disclosure.

432 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1999

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About the author

Bruce I. Jacobs

7 books1 follower
Bruce I. Jacobs holds a PhD in finance from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of Capital Ideas and Market Realities: Option Replication, Investor Behavior, and Stock Market Crashes and coauthor, with Kenneth Levy, of Equity Management: Quantitative Analysis for Stock Selection. He serves on the advisory board of the Journal of Portfolio Management.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Brian.
5 reviews
May 4, 2019
A mix of a definitive undressing of portfolio insurance and market/business history. Should've had a heavier hand with editing. The pictures of mid-1980s ads for portfolio insurance products are worth the (used) price of the book.
Profile Image for James.
301 reviews73 followers
September 7, 2010
40 pages instead of 350, would have been much better
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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