Publications

Investors and Markets

Type
Link
Cost
Paid
Published
2007
Updated
2008
Full Name
Investors and Markets: Portfolio Choices, Asset Prices, and Investment Advice

Bridging the gap between the best financial theory and investment practice, Investors and Markets will help investment professionals make better portfolio choices by being smarter about asset prices. It shows that investment professionals cannot make good portfolio choices unless they understand the determinants of asset prices. In addition to popularizing the most sophisticated form of asset-price analysis, Investors and Markets reflects a lifetime of thinking about investing by one of the leading minds in financial economics. Any serious investment professional will benefit from this book’s unique insights.

"Sharpe's Investors and Markets is an impressive and thought provoking work. . . . His work breaks new ground in the fields of portfolio and asset pricing theory. I highly recommend this book, particularly for planners interested in understanding the theory behind the advice that we give."

— NAPFA Advisor


"William Sharpe has written a new book . . . which may cause a revolution -- or, at least, a coup in finance. . . . Investors and Markets brings the subjects of portfolio choice and asset pricing together into a single, integrated view of investment science. The impact of [this book], though more a coup than a revolution, deserves to occur more quickly."

— John Finneran, The Motley Fool


"Throughout the past 40 years, Sharpe has remained one of the most influential voices in finance for both academics and practitioners. As is true for all of Sharpe's writings, investment professionals will do well to read Investors and Markets and carefully absorb its insights."

— Ronald L. Moy, Financial Analysts Journal


"Sharpe's book has much that is good: setting out complex issues such as the capital-asset pricing model and market risk/reward theorem in readily understandable terms, showing the importance of trading. Mime preferences, risk aversion, how individual actions, perhaps irrational on occasion, can still lead to a rational outcome, estimates of the equity risk premium, and the relative value of passive and active investing."

— Andrew Milligan, The Business Economist


"William F. Sharpe says his pioneering work on the Capital Asset Pricing Model is ready for a makeover. The 42-year-old Model--which earned Mr. Sharpe a Nobel Memorial Prize in economics in 1990-- is being revamped because Mr. Sharpe says he found a better way for portfolio managers and business-school students to learn about how portfolios are constructed and securities are priced. . . . Mr. Sharpe's new book shows that a simulator based on the state/preference Model can mimic market behavior and can be used where mean-variance analysis won't work."

— Joel Chernoff, Pensions and Investments