The View | Figuring out today’s messy stock markets takes a dose of Harry Markowitz’s modern portfolio theory
- The last quarter was dominated by narratives of rising interest rates and inflation, yet consumers are spending, job vacancies abound and house prices are firm
- What to make of this is unclear, but Markowitz’s work would suggest a robust, long-term portfolio of equities and bonds, perhaps rebalancing every few years
Harry Markowitz, one of the first researchers to put rigour into investment decision-making, died on June 22 at age 95. Rightly regarded as the father of modern financial analysis, his life neatly spanned the entire lifetime of financial research.
The young Markowitz was a mathematician looking for a PhD topic and a chance meeting led him to research the financial markets. He realised that contemporary investors looked only at returns, so he introduced the concept of risk (defined by probabilities) that can be visualised as a line on a graph that plots return against risk.
Markowitz encapsulated diversification mathematically in his 1952 paper “Portfolio Selection”, from which came the term “modern portfolio theory”. In the same year, he published “The Utility of Wealth”, an early tilt towards behavioural economics. In two papers, published at the tender age of 25, he established financial economics and touched upon the two major topics of classical and behavioural finance.
It led to a lifelong association with the Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics and a Nobel Prize in economics in 1990. Financial economics research is full of irony, as the great economist Milton Friedman initially refused to give Markowitz his PhD because finance was “not economics”.