标签:
杂谈 |
萨缪尔逊对投行人的劝告。
MIT economist and Nobel Prize winner Paul Samuelson is even more blunt. After examining the uninspiring record of money managers vs. the market as a whole, he writes,
"Do I really believe what I have been saying? I would like to believe otherwise. But a respect for evidence compels me to incline toward the hypothesis that most portfolio decisionmakers should go out of business,“ take up plumbing, teach Greek, or help produce the annual GNP by serving as corporate executives. Even if this advice to drop dead is good advice, it obviously is not counsel that will be eagerly followed." (Paul A. Samuelson, "Challenge to Judgement," The Journal of Portfolio Management, Fall 1974)
In 1974,Paul Samuelson publishes "Challenge to Judgment" in the Journal of Portfolio Management. Most fund managers and most portfolio decision makers, he writes, "should go out of business--take up plumbing, teach Greek, or help produce the annual GNP by serving as corporate executives...Few people will commit suicide without a push."