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  1. Hace 1 día · · Robert Merton y Myron Scholes: Ganaron el Premio Nobel de Economía por su trabajo en la valoración de opciones y la gestión del riesgo. · Daniel Kahneman y Amos Tversky: Desarrollaron la Teoría Prospectiva, que explica cómo los individuos toman decisiones en situaciones de riesgo, desviándose de la Teoría de la Utilidad Esperada.

  2. Hace 5 días · Meet Bambino Pons: Singing commentator, Scholes and Premier League. Mauricio Alencar. He may not look like he belongs to Argentina’s selection of messianic football figures. But while Maradona ...

  3. Hace 2 días · Part I of this article (posted on Blog.ValuEngine.com on May 22, click HERE) started with Louis Bachelier’s work from 1900 and covered all the theoretical work done up to and including William Sharpe, Ph.D.’s seminal work in 1964. However, none of that early research had yet been applied successfully to actual investments in any meaningful way.

  4. Hace 3 días · It was Myron Scholes for the Black-Scholes. It was vibrant, the Berkeley Stanford finance attitude and you had to realise that the world was changing. And that became a petri dish to grow all kinds of new objects and bacteria, not only transistors and Silicon Valley, but a lot of modern finance came out of California in those days.

  5. Hace 3 días · Gracias al desarrollo de estas técnicas en los años 70, Fisher Black, Myron Scholes y Robert Merton idearon la teoría de la valoración de opciones en tiempo continuo que valió a dos de sus autores (Fisher Black falleció antes) el Premio Nobel de Economía en 1997.

  6. Hace 4 días · Rooney hailed the influence of Scholes as a player and was in awe at how the United legend “adapted” himself after undergoing a position change when he was younger. The Plymouth Argyle boss said that Scholes, Lampard and Gerrard were all “world class,” irrespective of the debate around the three legendary former players.

  7. Hace 2 días · As far back as 1998 a rinky-dink little hedge fund (backed by two Nobel Prize-winning economists, Myron Scholes [2] and Robert Merton [3], Long-Term Capital Management, believed it had an unbeatable system to play these markets.