Results 151 to 160 of about 1,597,055 (210)
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2003
Notes on authors. Introduction. Property and investment - A R MacLeary. Valuation techniques: A matter of evidence and motive - W D Fraser. The current discounted cash flow models for the valuation and analysis of property investment: an examination of some of the problems - N Nanthakumaran.
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Notes on authors. Introduction. Property and investment - A R MacLeary. Valuation techniques: A matter of evidence and motive - W D Fraser. The current discounted cash flow models for the valuation and analysis of property investment: an examination of some of the problems - N Nanthakumaran.
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2011
So there you are on the couch watching TV when an Oreo® cookie ad activates in you a desire to get a glass of milk. It has been a long day, and you are feeling a little spent. A small calculation takes place—almost subconsciously—as you decide whether it is worth the effort to get up and pour yourself a glass. Finally, the thirst wins out.
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So there you are on the couch watching TV when an Oreo® cookie ad activates in you a desire to get a glass of milk. It has been a long day, and you are feeling a little spent. A small calculation takes place—almost subconsciously—as you decide whether it is worth the effort to get up and pour yourself a glass. Finally, the thirst wins out.
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2002
Probably the most basic tenet of quantitative investments is the efficient markets hypothesis, or EMH, which says that the price of an asset incorporates all information currently known about it. The fact that different assets have different expected returns reflects only the fact that some are riskier than others, as investors demand a higher expected
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Probably the most basic tenet of quantitative investments is the efficient markets hypothesis, or EMH, which says that the price of an asset incorporates all information currently known about it. The fact that different assets have different expected returns reflects only the fact that some are riskier than others, as investors demand a higher expected
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1989
Investment is the engine of a capitalist economy. Replacement investment is the most important component of investment. In Hayek’s words: The essential characteristic of capital, and one which affects the current input, is that it needs replacement and in consequence leads to investment. This in turn leads to the creation of new capital, but once this
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Investment is the engine of a capitalist economy. Replacement investment is the most important component of investment. In Hayek’s words: The essential characteristic of capital, and one which affects the current input, is that it needs replacement and in consequence leads to investment. This in turn leads to the creation of new capital, but once this
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Modern Theories of Investment Pricing
1984Methods of fundamental analysis, such as that explained in chapter 6, which attempt to assess the intrinsic worth of a security and therefore identify underpriced or overpriced stock, have increasingly been criticised as irrelevant and a waste of time.
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Investment Theories and Applications
Financial Analysts Journal, 1960Is it possible for investors to formulate a theory of investing? Is there a way of rationalizing the investment process to reduce to a manageable level the flow of services, newspapers, articles and plethora of corporate detail apparently so necessary to investment decisions?
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1975
Keynes characterized his contribution as “a theory of why output and employment are so liable to fluctuation” (QJE, p. 221). In the “pure” theory, where government and foreign demand are ignored, employment depends upon consumption and investment demand. Consumption demand is passive, as it “depends mainly on the level of income” (QJE, p. 219), that is,
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Keynes characterized his contribution as “a theory of why output and employment are so liable to fluctuation” (QJE, p. 221). In the “pure” theory, where government and foreign demand are ignored, employment depends upon consumption and investment demand. Consumption demand is passive, as it “depends mainly on the level of income” (QJE, p. 219), that is,
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Investment Theory, Probability Theory, and Uncertainty
2017The epistemological beliefs of investment theory are rooted in the philosophy of probability. Markowitz’s arguments for using statistics in investment theory stem from Savage’s theory of subjective probabilities. The CAPM and the empirical investment theory are founded on the idea of objective probabilities.
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