Rating: Summary: A practical application of stock market mispricings Review: After reading the January 2004 issue of Money magazine, this book was next on my reading list. The site www.beyondtherandomwalk.com is quite informative. Table of contents: Chapter 1: Market Efficiency and Anomalies Chapter 2: January Effect and the New December Effect Chapter 3: The Weekend Effect Chapter 4: Short-term Price Drift Chapter 5: Momentum in Industry Portfolios Chapter 6: Mispricing of Mutual Funds Chapter 7: Trading by Insiders Chapter 8: Changes to the S&P 500 Index Chapter 9: Merger Arbitrage Chapter10: International Investing And The Home Bias Chapter11: Forward Rate Bias Chapter12: Understanding And Learning From Behavioral Finance Chapter13: A Description Of Other Possible Mispricings Pros: All of the anomalies seem to be based on real research, not just hot air. The trading strategies are clear and easy to implement. Singal is cautious in making recommendations. The summary table at the beginning of the book lets you choose what you want to read and use. Seems very credible. Easy to read and understand. Many, many new things all investors wish they knew. Cons: Confusing title. More more description about each anomaly would have helped but may be the author did not want to make it into an encylopedia. The list of references helps for further exploration. Each anomaly has a discussion of about 25 pages, which is okay as a start. Value: Excellent. Strongly recommended.
Rating: Summary: A practical application of stock market mispricings Review: After reading the January 2004 issue of Money magazine, this book was next on my reading list. The site www.beyondtherandomwalk.com is quite informative. Table of contents: Chapter 1: Market Efficiency and Anomalies Chapter 2: January Effect and the New December Effect Chapter 3: The Weekend Effect Chapter 4: Short-term Price Drift Chapter 5: Momentum in Industry Portfolios Chapter 6: Mispricing of Mutual Funds Chapter 7: Trading by Insiders Chapter 8: Changes to the S&P 500 Index Chapter 9: Merger Arbitrage Chapter10: International Investing And The Home Bias Chapter11: Forward Rate Bias Chapter12: Understanding And Learning From Behavioral Finance Chapter13: A Description Of Other Possible Mispricings Pros: All of the anomalies seem to be based on real research, not just hot air. The trading strategies are clear and easy to implement. Singal is cautious in making recommendations. The summary table at the beginning of the book lets you choose what you want to read and use. Seems very credible. Easy to read and understand. Many, many new things all investors wish they knew. Cons: Confusing title. More more description about each anomaly would have helped but may be the author did not want to make it into an encylopedia. The list of references helps for further exploration. Each anomaly has a discussion of about 25 pages, which is okay as a start. Value: Excellent. Strongly recommended.
Rating: Summary: A really useful book for practitioners Review: I am a (successful) practitioner who has been exploiting mispricings in the market for more than 10 years - in bad times and good times.
This is an excellent book - readable, comprehensive, and up to date. It is not a fool's book but the ideal book for an intelligent person. It describes the risks associated with each strategy. I particularly like the strategy with Fidelity Select Funds.
I hope the book becomes popular so that it can be reissued every few years with new insights and new data.
Rating: Summary: Great book on market mispricings Review: I never thought I would see a book on the stock market that is believable, yet useful. Malkiel's book on Random Walk is accurate but according to that you can't do anything. Singal's book is aptly titled "Beyond the Random Walk". He seems to believe in market efficiency but says that there are times when the market or a few stocks are not correctly priced. The book talks about these mispricings in a refreshingly simple language though it relies on amazing amount of research. Also has trading strategies that are useful. I would recommend it.
Rating: Summary: I like it Review: I think I became a little smarter at investing after reading this book.
Rating: Summary: Something for investors Review: I was looking for information on timing mutual funds and stumbled on the site of this book: http://www.BeyondTheRandomWalk.com. I was so intrigued by the book that I ordered it. Not a bad book at all. It explained everything I wanted to know about mispricing of mutual fund NAVs in a very simple language. Amazing that these people (Singal and others) have known about it for almost 10 years -- and investors like me did not know. This is just one chapter in the book. There are ten anomalies he discusses. Worth a lot more than the $30 I paid for it.
Rating: Summary: Something for investors Review: I was looking for information on timing mutual funds and stumbled on the site of this book: http://www.BeyondTheRandomWalk.com. I was so intrigued by the book that I ordered it. Not a bad book at all. It explained everything I wanted to know about mispricing of mutual fund NAVs in a very simple language. Amazing that these people (Singal and others) have known about it for almost 10 years -- and investors like me did not know. This is just one chapter in the book. There are ten anomalies he discusses. Worth a lot more than the $30 I paid for it.
Rating: Summary: Detailed and Useful Trading Strategies.... Review: The financial markets give investors a chance to make money when they work - and when they don't. When markets work efficiently they uncover the true value of an asset by pegging its fair price for informed buyers and sellers. When for a variety of reasons markets are inefficient they misprice assets. When the specific circumstances of that mispricing are recognized and persistent (viz. predictable) it is an anomaly. The regularity of anomalies offers investors, at least in theory, the opportunity to profit by taking a position that recognizes the temporary nature of the mispricing before it rights itself. These anomalies are the subject of Singal's study which takes its title from the updated 1970's classic exposition of the efficient market hypothesis by Princeton Economics professor Burton Malkiel. This is a detailed look at ten market anomalies. Singal's goal is to move us well beyond descriptions and academic evidence and offer trading strategies intended to achieve an outsized market return. Each chapter summarizes key points and projects potential returns from implementing the outlined strategy. Additional market anomalies are briefly identified in the final chapter. As a bonus of sorts an appendix gives the most detailed explanation of short selling I have read. From a practical standpoint some anomalous situations would appear to be more exploitable than others. Mergers between public companies occur with some frequency, so an understanding of how to play the merger premium paid by acquiring companies for their target is useful. Changes to the composition of the S&P 500 Index and their impact on stock prices occur with less frequency, but this is balanced by opportunities from the January and "New December Effect" (mark your calendars). From anecdotal observations, I am not convinced by the author's discussion of the Weekend Effect, and the chapter on International Investing seems like a fair argument for diversification rather than an anomaly. The so-called Value Line Enigma identified in the final chapter is perplexing to this reader, since the supposed outperformance of their recommended stocks runs directly counter to a similar study of mutual funds picked by Morningstar. An apples to oranges comparison to some, perhaps, but it is a sufficiently known study to warrant comment. A chapter dealing with currency forward rates will be beyond most non-professional investors. I would have liked to have heard more about spin-offs, the long-term overperformance of "independent" subsidiaries occasionally distributed to shareholders of a parent company. Singal identifies the simpler, "sharper" corporate mission as the reason. Actually, it may be strong sponsorship and generous, upfront management incentives which spark those returns. The question remains, does this serious academic study offer practical trading strategies to investors bent on gain. The answer is that Singal has so many ideas packed into the book that investors will be influenced in the aggregate in their trading decisions. Not to be aware of these market biases exposes traders to more uncertainty and risk than may be necessary.
Rating: Summary: Great Value Review: The format in which this book was written is outstanding. Simply because I don't have an interest in all the chapters, and the way in which it was written allows me to read several chapters without reading the entire text. The anomalies are based on backtesting and research, and not just feel or emotion. Singal shows that there are temporary mispricings in the market and offers suggestions how individuals can implement strategies to profit from them.
Rating: Summary: Great Value Review: The format in which this book was written is outstanding. Simply because I don't have an interest in all the chapters, and the way in which it was written allows me to read several chapters without reading the entire text. The anomalies are based on backtesting and research, and not just feel or emotion. Singal shows that there are temporary mispricings in the market and offers suggestions how individuals can implement strategies to profit from them.
|