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Latest Read: The Man Who Solved the Market

The Man Who Solved the Market: How Jim Simons Launched the Quant Revolution by Gregory Zuckerman. This book is an easy ‘book of the year’ recommendation. The storyline is a mathematical whizkid recruiting talented mathematicians and scientists in building a successful investment firm.

The Man Who Solved The Market

Simons went to MIT in 1958, obtaining a mathematics Bachelors, then a PhD at UC Berkeley also in mathematics PhD at the age of 23. During the cold war Simons began working for the NSA in 1968 breaking Soviet encryption. Simons won the Oswald Weblen Prize in Geometry in 1976. Likewise he later became chair the Math department at SUNY at Stony Brook from 1968 to 1978. He began developing a talent for recruiting high performing, well respected mathematicians away from Ivy League schools.

Simons is widely recognized for establishing pattern recognition, development of string theory, and developed the Chern–Simons form. His efforts combining geometry and topology with quantum field theory has paid off handsomely. At the same time, Gregory serves four keys lessons for anyone striving to achieve success.

Lesson #1: Believe in yourself

Yet to the surprise of many, Jim left academia in 1978 to launch his investment firm. Here is where James shines: establishing a firm by believing in yourself. Chiefly hiring noted mathematicians James Ax, Sandor Strauss, Leonard Baum, Elwyn Berlekamp, Robert Mercer, and noted programmer David Magerman to join him was the bedrock of his firm. Gregory writes about the upbringing of key players in the book to provide just enough insight to what makes mathematicians and scientists tick.

Simons understood that bringing very intelligent people to his company would continue to build a foundation for success. Even Jim’s competition would shortly change markets:

One programmer, Jeffrey Bezos, worked with Shaw a few more years before piling his belongings into a moving van and driving to Seattle, his then-wife MacKenzie behind the wheel.

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The Man Who Solved the Market is an excellent book which reinforces the notion to surround yourself with smart people. Along this path, his company dealt with his own bad behaviors while also managing the motivations and decisions of those he hired. From time to time, these talented teams caused friction. Name an organization that is immune from this.

Lesson #2: True success is not an overnight gimmick

Although society expects little today by the way of grit and success must be immediate. On the contrary, Simons and his team created, tested, and then re-created models over a twenty year span.

Furthermore, Simons understood historical financial big data would better tune their prediction models. The longer tail provided the math quants a tested, fine tuned approach in establishing new success whose by-product was large sums of money.