International audienceThis article is an addition to the revisited history of financial economics. While Markowitz (1952, 1959), Roy (1952), and Tobin (1958) are recognized as the founding fathers of Modern Portfolio Theory, we recall that its origins should be traced prior to 1914. We consider two, turn-of-the-century, French, financial analysts and suggest that notions such as risk aversion and risk premium, international diversification and correlation, specific and systematic risks and arbitrage were common sense for Leroy-Beaulieu (1906) and Neymarck (1913). The contribution of these authors to the development of Modern Portfolio Theory—long before the 1950s—should not be underestimated. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER
This article summarizes some main results in modern portfolio theory. First, the Markowitz approach ...
This article presents an overview of the assumptions and unintended consequences of the widespread a...
Ce texte constitue le chapitre 2 de l'ouvrage Le modèle de marche au hasard en finance, de Christian...
Portfolio theory is a well-developed paradigm. There are excellent textbooks on the subject. Of cour...
In 1952, Harry Markowitz revolutionized the world of finance with his paper, Portfolio Selection I...
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Portfolio theory occupies an essential place in modern finance, while portfolio management grounded ...
Accès au texte intégral réservé aux membres de l’université de LorraineThis PhD dissertation is comp...
The paper offers textual evidence from a series of financial advice documents in the late nineteenth...
The article analyzes the expected return and portfolio risk. The development of a broad and efficien...
This article deals with the emergence of the random walk hypothesis and the nineteenth-century “Scie...
The development of modern portfolio theory was largely induced out of the need to accurately predict...
Three pioneers of quantitative finance have now been justly honored: Harry Markowitz, Merton Miller,...
The hypothesis of random walk in financial theory : some historical arguments to explain an ethic ch...
Indexed management and averages theory One hypothesis assumes that indexed passive management is a ...
This article summarizes some main results in modern portfolio theory. First, the Markowitz approach ...
This article presents an overview of the assumptions and unintended consequences of the widespread a...
Ce texte constitue le chapitre 2 de l'ouvrage Le modèle de marche au hasard en finance, de Christian...
Portfolio theory is a well-developed paradigm. There are excellent textbooks on the subject. Of cour...
In 1952, Harry Markowitz revolutionized the world of finance with his paper, Portfolio Selection I...
This seminar paper deals with historical development of the way we view the hustle and bustle of eve...
Portfolio theory occupies an essential place in modern finance, while portfolio management grounded ...
Accès au texte intégral réservé aux membres de l’université de LorraineThis PhD dissertation is comp...
The paper offers textual evidence from a series of financial advice documents in the late nineteenth...
The article analyzes the expected return and portfolio risk. The development of a broad and efficien...
This article deals with the emergence of the random walk hypothesis and the nineteenth-century “Scie...
The development of modern portfolio theory was largely induced out of the need to accurately predict...
Three pioneers of quantitative finance have now been justly honored: Harry Markowitz, Merton Miller,...
The hypothesis of random walk in financial theory : some historical arguments to explain an ethic ch...
Indexed management and averages theory One hypothesis assumes that indexed passive management is a ...
This article summarizes some main results in modern portfolio theory. First, the Markowitz approach ...
This article presents an overview of the assumptions and unintended consequences of the widespread a...
Ce texte constitue le chapitre 2 de l'ouvrage Le modèle de marche au hasard en finance, de Christian...