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Book: Fortune's Formula: The Untold Story of the Scientific Betting System That Beat the Casinos and Wall Street :: Robert Kiyosaki|Books :: Book
Date: Thursday, 08 January, 2009 :: 04:17
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Fortune's Formula: The Untold Story of the Scientific Betting System That Beat the Casinos and Wall Street
List Price: USD $15.00
from USD $8.61
Product Group: book
Manufacturer: Hill and Wang
Release Date: 2006-09-19
Studio: Hill and Wang
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Reviews:
Average Customer Review:
Summary: Enjoyable and inspiring tale
Date: 2008-11-23 - 
Comment: It might be a matter of personal taste, since I've found other reviewers with exactly the opposite opinion, but I really enjoyed the book and, given the fact that English is not my first language, it can't be possibly be written as badly as they say. Nevertheless, I found the book truly inspiring. It displays the unlikely social networks that can be build in a complex society, the risks people take, and the rewards some win. I didn't expect a course on "applied Kelly criterion" and much less the ultimate formula to give me advantage in the financial markets or other bet-like places, but a tale about Shannon, Ed. Thorp, Manny Kimmel, the boys at LTCM, etc. Those people who want a course on that should refer to anything derived from Bachelier/Markowitz. Those who like reading for reading, this is an interesting story about gambling.
Summary: Book review
Date: 2008-10-06 - 
Comment: Good book. I enjoyed it.
Especially good for those interested in the Kelly criterion and all the people along the way who wanted to maximise gambling profit or investment profit.
Summary: Entertaining
Date: 2008-08-28 - 
Comment: Book was more than I expected. Tied in many stories dating back to the early 1900's and the beginning of AT&T. Excellent read, very entertaining and well researched.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
Summary: It takes exceptionally smart people to make truly massive blunders
Date: 2008-06-25 - 
Comment: This book is a concise look at the evolution of formal investment theory, with continual contextual references to its ties to gambling and to organized crime. It also is a hilarious and insightful history of gambling from the Bernoulli's in the 1700s through the hedge fund traders of the late 1990's.
The author devotes over 50 pages to notes and the index. This was appreciated since I wanted to look up more about so many of the anecdotes he included.
Mr. Poundstone poignantly describes the downfall of high-flying firms such as LTCM, where the investment wizards went from the darlings of Wall Street to the dredges of the investment community in large part because they were so clever; and they started to believe they were infallible.
One LTCM road-show presentation was held at the insurance company Conseco in Indianapolis. Andrew Chow, a Conseco derivatives trader, interrupted Scholes. "There aren't that many opportunities," Chow objected. "You can't make that kind of money in Treasury markets."
Scholes snapped: "You're the reason - because of fools like you we can." (Page 281)
Warren Buffett marveled at how "ten or 15 guys with an average IQ of maybe 170" could get themselves "into a position where they can lose all their money." That was much the sentiment of Daniel Bernoulli, way back in 1738, when he wrote: "A man who risks his entire fortune acts like a simpleton, however great may be the possible gain." (Page 291)
He also points out the real world flaws in some theoretically appealing scams. The St. Petersburg Wager seems mathematically correct; yet it overlooks a vitally important constraint (pages 182-184). Another is the unfounded weight we unconsciously give to historical returns, as evidenced by his retelling of another Warren Buffett story:
In a 1984 speech, Buffett asked his listeners to imagine that all 215 million Americans pair off and bet a dollar on the outcome of a coin toss. The one who calls the toss incorrectly is eliminated and pays his dollar to the one who was correct.
The next day, the winners pair off and play the same game with each other, each now betting $2. Losers are eliminated and that day's winners end up with $4. The game continues with a new toss at doubled stakes each day. After twenty tosses, 215 people will be left in the game. Each will have over a million dollars.
According to Buffett, some of these people will write books on their methods: "How I Turned a Dollar into a Million in Twenty Days Working Thirty Seconds a Morning." Some will badger ivory-tower economists who say it can't be done: "If it can't be done, why are there 215 us?" "Then some business school professor will probably be rude enough to bring up the fact that if 215 million orangutans had engaged in a similar exercise, the result would be the same - 215 egotistical orangutans with 20 straight winning flips." (Page 314)
The author follows the lives of a few major contributors to investment theory, information theory, and betting theory: Claude Shannon, who invented Information Theory and paved the way for the digital computer age; John Kelly, who developed the formula for gains with no possibility of ruin; and Edward Thorpe, who built upon these findings and beat the roulette wheels, the blackjack tables and the investment fund managers.
It's a fast read - only 329 pages before the notes and index. I highly recommend it!
Summary: Interesting review of the systems of the past
Date: 2008-06-09 - 
Comment: This is a nice look into the past systems of betting. Also nicely written and gives a good understanding of the Kelly formula. Was not quite what I thought it would be but was a nice book.
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