Coursework 7
Physics and the City
A. Questions for Submission
7.1 Classical Investment Philosophies
- Warren Buffet wrote that, `Price is what you pay; value is what you get'. Explain. What are the possible problems with this investment philosophy? Do you find Buffet's view plausible?
- What is chartism? Is it just a matter of 'financial astrology'? Or, do you find this investment philosophy plausible?
7.2 Random prices and rates of return
- Explain the analogy between the motion of fat globules in water and security prices in a market.
- Compare the random price hypothesis to the random rate of return hypothesis. When do you think it is reasonable to adopt (or reject) either one? Why?
- Is it possible to adopt the random rate of return hypothesis in a model, and still reasonably believe in a fundamentalist or chartist investment philosophy? Explain.
B. For Further Thought (No Submission)
- What does the random walk? The underlying human mechanisms that determine the price of a stock are invisible to us, which suggests we might use a random walk to describe it. But how can one determine if it is price or rate of return (or something else entirely) that is doing the random walk?
- Not so random after all? With almost no exceptions, a sugar molecule in water will experience about a trillion collisions a second that give rise to its jiggling motion. But an unpopular stock price may have less than a hundred analogous human effects influencing its value. How can such cases make the random walk model less accurate?
- Approximations. When the rate of return is small, a log-normally distributed collection of prices is approximately equal to a normally distributed collection of prices. We might similarly expect that the log-normally distributed collection is actually just an approximation of some yet-more-accurate distribution. Is this a problem for our model, or at least, for the extent to which we think the model correctly describes the world?