Wall Street sells the Arithmetic Mean. "This fund returns 20% per year on average!" But Vince shows that the Arithmetic Mean is a lie for traders who reinvest. If you lose 50% one year and gain 50% the next, your arithmetic average is 0%—but your geometric reality is a .
In the pantheon of trading literature, few books strike as much fear into the hearts of casual investors as Portfolio Management Formulas: Mathematical Trading Methods for the Futures, Options, and Stock Markets by Ralph Vince. Published in November 1990, this is not a beach read. It is not filled with pretty charts of head-and-shoulders patterns or promises of turning $1,000 into $1 million overnight. Wall Street sells the Arithmetic Mean
Instead, it is a dense, equation-laden, mind-bending journey into the mathematics of survival. In the pantheon of trading literature, few books
A deep dive into the 1990 classic that taught Wall Street that how much to trade is more important than what to trade. Instead, it is a dense, equation-laden, mind-bending journey
Vince’s formulas force the trader to optimize for the . He argues that a system with a lower arithmetic average but less variance will make you richer over 100 trades than a system with a high arithmetic average and high variance. 3. The Risk of Ruin (Exact Calculations) Prior to Vince, "Risk of Ruin" was a vague concept. Analysts used simple formulas: "If you risk 2% per trade, you have a 0.5% chance of ruin." Vince laughed at this.