Top 25 Quotes & Sayings by Merton Miller

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American economist Merton Miller.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
Merton Miller

Merton Howard Miller was an American economist, and the co-author of the Modigliani–Miller theorem (1958), which proposed the irrelevance of debt-equity structure. He shared the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1990, along with Harry Markowitz and William F. Sharpe. Miller spent most of his academic career at the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business.

Arbitrage proof has since been widely used throughout finance and economics.
I had some of the students in my finance class actually do some empirical work on capital structures, to see if we could find any obvious patterns in the data, but we couldn't see any.
I was born in Boston, Massachusetts on May 16, 1923, the only child of Joel and Sylvia Miller. — © Merton Miller
I was born in Boston, Massachusetts on May 16, 1923, the only child of Joel and Sylvia Miller.
What counts is what you do with your money, not where it came from.
My main interest, however, was in economics, not law.
My research interests since then have shifted strongly towards the economic and regulatory problems of the financial services industry, and especially of the securities and options exchanges.
I can't speak for them, of course, but I believe that most economists would accept the view that, while you sometimes can make a score by sheer luck, you can't do it constantly, unless you're willing to put the resources in.
But in practice, if often comes down to not suffering a loss as big as the huge gain you made a while ago.
What happened after publication of our paper was that, for the next 40 years, people said, all right, we now know the answer to the capital structure question under ideal conditions.
Of course. I favor passive investing for most investors, because markets are amazingly successful devices for incorporating information into stock prices.
I should mention that I am a member of the board of directors of Dimensional Fund Advisors.
Most people might just as well buy a share of the whole market, which pools all the information, than delude themselves into thinking they know something the market doesn't.
Everyone recognizes that's a joke because obviously the number and shape of the pieces doesn't affect the size of the pizza. And similarly, the stocks, bonds, warrants, etc., issued don't affect the aggregate value of the firm.
To beat the market you'll have to invest serious bucks to dig up information no one else has yet.
Another is, if you take money out of your left pocket and put it in your right pocket, you're no richer.
Junk bonds prove there's nothing magical in a Aaa bond rating.
So everybody has some information. The function of the markets is to aggregate that information, evaluate it, and get it incorporated into prices.
You only need to make one big score in finance to be a hero forever.
As an economics undergraduate, I also worked on a part-time basis in Cambridge, Massachusetts, for a company that was advising customers about portfolio decisions, writing reports.
My expertise was in public finance, particularly corporate taxation, since I had worked at the US Treasury.
I favour passive investing for most investors, because markets are amazingly successful devices for incorporating information into stock prices. — © Merton Miller
I favour passive investing for most investors, because markets are amazingly successful devices for incorporating information into stock prices.
If there's 10,000 people looking at the stocks and trying to pick winners, one in 10,000 is going to score, by chance alone, a great coup, and that's all that's going on. It's a game, it's a chance operation, and people think they are doing something purposeful... but they're really not.
... Any pension fund manager who doesn't have the vast majority-and I mean 70% or 80% of his or her portfolio-in passive investments is guilty of malfeasance, nonfeasance or some other kind of bad feasance!
Everybody has some information. The function of the markets is to aggregate that information, evaluate it and get it incorporated into prices.
Diversification is your buddy.
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