An innovative framework to understanding risk management The Rules of Risk takes the reader from the present to the future of risk management. Combining a novel approach to risk management with the tools of mathematics, finance, computer science, and an understanding of capital markets, authors Dembo and Freeman present their framework of a new risk paradigm that peers into the risk-taking of tomorrow to enhance our ability to make choices and manage risk. The implications of their visionary work are far-reaching, affecting the future of investing, the financial institution, the economy, and beyond. The Rules of Risk provides investors not only with an applied vision of the future of risk, but with a knowledge of what risk management is and the thinking behind it.
'This excellent and readable book provides an innovative approach to choosing actions when the outcomes are uncertain. Anyone with an interest in improving their decision-making skills would benefit from reading this. Anyone with a professional interest in risk management must read it.' Stephen A. Ross, Fischer Black Visiting Professor of Finance, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, Sterling Professor of Economics and Finance, Yale University. 'Ron Dembo and Andrew Freeman have done an excellent job of describing how to think about and measure risk. This will become required reading for business and personal investment executives.' Ned C. Lautenbach Senior Vice President and Group Executive, IBM.
Introduction: It Really Happened 1. How to Thing about Risk 2. The Elements of Risk Management 3. Of Decisions and Risk 4. Sweet Regret 5. Keeping Up With The Joneses 6. Paying for Playing 7. The Rap Trap and Evaluations 8. Of Life, Lotteries, and Stock Options 9. Making Good Things Better 10. Know Your Risk 11. How Regret Can Change Your Life Index
About R.S. Dembo and Andrew Freeman
Senior Vice President and Group Executive, IBMRON S. DEMBO is President and CEO of Algorithmics, Inc., a leading provider of innovative financial risk management software. Prior to founding Algorithmics in 1989, he managed a risk analysis group at Goldman, Sachs, and served on the academic faculties of several universities, including Yale University. ANDREW FREEMAN manages and edits the financial services division of the Economist Intelligence Unit. From 1994--1997 he was the American Finance Editor for The Economist in New York.