|
1969 2012
Prize category:
|
The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1990
Harry M. Markowitz, Merton H. Miller, William F. Sharpe
The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1990
Nobel Prize Award Ceremony
Harry M. Markowitz
Merton H. Miller
William F. Sharpe
Autobiography
I was born on June 16, 1934 in Boston,
Massachusetts. At that time my parents had completed their
undergraduate educations - my father in English literature, my
mother in science. My father was then employed at Harvard University,
working in the placement office.
In 1940, world events led to the activation of my father's
National Guard unit and a move to Texas. The subsequent outbreak
of World War II required further moves to northern California and
finally to southern California.
The majority of my pre-college education was completed in the
public schools of Riverside, California, which were excellent. I
benefitted there from stimulating teachers and challenging
curricula.
In 1951 I enrolled at the University of California at Berkeley, with a
plan to major in science en route to a medical degree. A year of
the associated courses convinced me that my preferences lay
elsewhere. To change both curriculum and locale I transferred to
the University of
California at Los Angeles with a declared major in Business
Administration.
In my first semester at UCLA I took Accounting and Economics--two
courses that were required for the Business degree. Both had a
major influence on my career. The accounting course dealt
primarily with bookkeeping, while the economics course focused on
microeconomic theory. I found bookkeeping tedious and light on
intellectual content. But I was greatly attracted to the rigor
and relevance of microeconomic theory. Hence, I changed my major
to Economics. I have since learned to appreciate Accounting on
both pragmatic and intellectual grounds, but am delighted that my
first brush with it helped turn me towards the field in which I
have worked happily throughout my professional life.
I took two degrees in Economics at UCLA before serving in the
Army. I received the Bachelor of Arts degree in 1955 and the
Master of Arts degree in 1956. While working for the former I was
named to Phi Beta Kappa.
Two professors at UCLA had a profound influence on my
career.
I was fortunate to serve as a research assistant for J. Fred
Weston, a professor of finance in the Business School, and also
to take courses from him. Fred first introduced me to the work of
Harry Markowitz and to the rest of the
challenging and rigorous research that was beginning to
revolutionize finance. As part of my PhD program I was
subsequently able to take a field in finance with Fred, greatly
broadening my understanding of the subject.
Armen Alchian, a professor of economics, was my role model at
UCLA. He taught his students to question everything; to always
begin an analysis with first principles; to concentrate on
essential elements and abstract from secondary ones; and to play
devil's advocate with one's own ideas. In his classes we were
able to watch a first-rate mind work on a host of fascinating
problems. I have attempted to emulate his approach to research
ever since. When I returned to pursue the PhD degree, I took a
field in microeconomics with Armen and he also served as chairman
of my dissertation committee.
After a short period in the Army, I joined the RAND Corporation in
1956 as an Economist. RAND was an almost ideal place for anyone
interested in performing research that was both aesthetically
pleasing and also pragmatic. During this period path-breaking
work in computer science, game theory, linear programming,
dynamic programming and applied economics was being done at RAND,
both by permanent staff and visitors from major universities. The
atmosphere was collegial and the schedule flexible. Most research
projects were chosen by the investigators, and additional work on
more fundamental issues was encouraged and generously supported.
Among other things, I learned computer programming at RAND.
Professional editors and colleagues also helped me improve my
communication skills, both written and oral.
While at RAND I pursued a PhD degree in Economics at UCLA. I
received the degree in 1961. After completing my field
examinations in 1960 I began work on a dissertation concerning
the economics of transfer prices. At the suggestion of Armen
Alchian, my preliminary results were reviewed by another faculty
member who had previously done research on the subject. He
thought that I should consider some other topic. Fred Weston
suggested that I might see if Harry Markowitz, who was then at
RAND, had any ideas. He had, and I proceeded to work closely with
him on the topic Portfolio Analysis Based on a Simplified
Model of the Relationships Among Securities. Although Harry
was not on my committee, he filled a role similar to that of
dissertation advisor. My debt to him is truly enormous. The
dissertation was approved in 1961, at which time I received the
PhD degree.
In the dissertation I explored a number of aspects of portfolio
analysis based on a model first suggested by Markowitz. At the
time I called it the "single index model", although it is now
generally termed a "one-factor model". Key is the assumption that
security returns are related to each other solely through
responses to one common factor. In the dissertation I addressed
both normative and positive results. The final chapter, A
Positive Theory of Security Market Behavior, included a
result similar to that now termed the security market line
relationship of the Capital Asset Pricing Model, but was obtained
in the limited environment in which returns are generated by a
one-factor model.
In 1961 I moved to Seattle to take a position in Finance at the
School of Business at the University of Washington. Once settled, I
prepared a paper summarizing the normative results from my
dissertation; the paper was subsequently published in
Management Science in 1963. More importantly, I began work
on a generalization of the equilibrium theory contained in the
final chapter of the dissertation. By the fall of 1961 I had
discovered that a very similar set of results could be obtained
without making any assumptions about the number of factors
influencing security returns. I first presented this approach at
the University
of Chicago in January 1962. Shortly thereafter I submitted a
paper on the subject to the Journal of Finance. An
initially negative report from a referee plus a change in
editorship delayed publication until September of 1964. Both in
content and title, this paper provided much of the basis for what
is now termed the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM).
The CAPM is built using an approach. familiar to every
microeconomist. First, one assumes some sort of maximizing
behavior on the part of participants in a market; then one
investigates the equilibrium conditions under which such markets
will clear. Since Markowitz had provided a model for the
requisite maximizing behavior, it is not surprising that I was
not alone in exploring its implications for market equilibrium.
Sometime in 1963, I received an unpublished paper from Jack
Treynor containing somewhat similar conclusions. In 1965, John
Lintner published his important paper with very similar results.
Later, Jan Mossin published a version that obtained the same
relationships in a more general setting.
I was at the University of Washington from 1961 through 1968,
with the exception of a year spent on leave at RAND. At
Washington I taught a wide-ranging set of subjects, covering
material from the fields of microeconomics, finance, computer
science, statistics, and operations research. As is so often the
case, I found that the best way to learn a subject was to teach
it. Hopefully, the students did not suffer overmuch from their
participation in the process.
My research during this period was as eclectic as my teaching. I
worked on extensions of the CAPM and empirical tests of its
implications. I also published books on the economics of
computers (based on research supported by RAND) and on computer
programming.
My years at Washington were busy but highly productive. While I
relied heavily on colleagues at RAND and at other universities
during this period, I was fortunate to have interested and
supportive colleagues in Seattle--most importantly, George Brabb,
Stephen Archer and Charles D'Ambrosio.
In 1968, I moved to the University of California at Irvine to participate in
an experiment involving the creation of a School of Social
Sciences with an interdisciplinary and quantitative focus. For
various reasons the expectations of many who participated in the
experiment were not fulfilled, leading some of us to go
elsewhere. I was fortunate to be invited to take a position at
the Stanford
University Graduate School of Business, to which I moved in
1970. Before doing so, however, I completed a book, Portfolio
Theory and Capital Markets , summarizing both normative and
positive work in these areas.
My years at Stanford have been all that anyone with interests in
both research and teaching could have desired. Throughout, I have
had the benefit of stimulating colleagues and students. Much of
my knowledge of finance was gained when I participated in a team
of three, teaching the first PhD seminar in the field at Stanford
in the early 1970's. Alan Kraus, Bob Litzenberger and I shared
not only our experience and knowledge but also an interest in
sailing--a sport in which we indulged fairly frequently.
I also learned a great deal from two colleagues, now departed, in
the 1970's. Alex Robichek combined a traditionalist's view of
finance with a thirst for new ideas; Paul Cootner came to the
field with totally fresh and innovative views. Both placed a
premium on useful theory. Both contributed much, through research
and teaching. Their premature deaths caused a tremendous loss for
the field of finance, for Stanford and for me.
Other finance colleagues, presently or formerly at Stanford, from
whom I learned much include Anat Admati, Doug Breeden, John Cox,
Darrell Duffie, Allan Kleidon, Mike Gibbons, Jack McDonald,
George Parker, Paul Pfleiderer, Myron Scholes, and Jim Van Home.
Finance students with whom I worked closely included Marcus
Bogue, Guy Cooper, Krishna Ramaswamy, and Howard Sosin.
In 1973 I was named the Timken Professor of Finance at
Stanford.
In the 1970s I concentrated most of my research effort on issues
connected with equilibrium in capital markets and the
implications thereof for investors' portfolio choices. Following
the passage of key legislation in the U.S. in 1974, I began to
study the role of investment policy for funds designed to fulfill
pension obligations. I also wrote a textbook, Investments,
designed to include institutional, theoretical and empirical
material in a form accessible to students in undergraduate and
graduate programs. The first edition, published in 1978, met with
considerable success. The book, now co-authored by Gordon
Alexander, is currently in its fourth edition. I am especially
gratified by the fact that a number of universities still
consider it appropriate for its intended purpose. A variant,
Fundamentals of Investments, also coauthored with Gordon
Alexander, published in 1989, has also been well received.
In the course of preparing and revising the Investments
text, I found it necessary to extend prior theory, create new
theory, and perform new empirical analyses. Perhaps the most
fruitful example of this activity is the creation of the binomial
option pricing procedure, first published in the 1978 edition of
Investments. It provides a discrete-state analogue of the
Black-Scholes procedure which assumes a continuous time setting.
Given today's computer power, the binomial procedure offers a
practical method for evaluating instruments with complex embedded
options, and is widely-used.
During this period I served as a consultant first to Merrill
Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith and then to Wells Fargo
Investment Advisors. In each case my goal was to help put into
practice some of the ideas of financial economics.
At Merrill Lynch I was involved primarily in designing services
for estimating beta values on a continuing basis for a large set
of common stocks and for providing risk-adjusted portfolio
performance measurement.
At Wells Fargo I helped with the creation of index funds, passive
portfolios tailored to meet investor objectives, estimation of
Security Market Lines (and Planes) using forecasts of future cash
flows, assessment of portfolio risk, choice of optimal portfolios
to track selected indices, and so on. In my opinion, the people
at Wells Fargo at the time were among the most creative and
innovative in the industry. From them I learned much about the
real world of investment. Such knowledge informed my teaching and
research in countless ways. Undoubtedly, my greatest debt in this
connection is to Bill Fouse, whose vision made Wells Fargo such
an exciting and stimulating organization at the time.
I spent the 1976-1977 academic year at the National Bureau of
Economic Research as a member of a team studying issues of
bank capital adequacy under the direction of Sherman Maisel. My
focus was on the relationship between deposit insurance and
default risk. The results, published in the Journal of
Financial and Quantitative Analysis in 1978, supported the
notion of risk-based insurance premia. Empirical work with Laurie
Goodman also showed that market values of securities of financial
institutions can reveal important information about capital
adequacy. The NBER project strongly advocated greater concern
with the risk of financial institutions and warned that a system
of fixed insurance rates and de facto unlimited coverage with
imperfect monitoring and enforcement procedures provides
dangerous incentives for those running such institutions to take
excessive risk. Would that our results had been heeded by those
concerned with savings and loan institutions in the United States
in the subsequent decade!
In the latter part of the 1970s I developed a simple yet
effective method for finding approximate solutions to a class of
portfolio analysis problems. The procedure, described in a
Stanford working paper and in my textbook, has been widely
implemented, although final publication of the paper describing
the algorithm was delayed until 1987, due to confusion at a
journal that had planned to publish it.
In 1980 I was elected President of the American Finance
Association. I chose as the topic of my Presidential Address,
Decentralized Investment Management. My goal was to
provide some structure for analyzing the widespread custom of
large institutional investors to divide funds among a number of
professional investment managers. The subject is interesting both
theoretically and practically, and my work on it continues.
In the 1980s I continued to work on issues relating to pension
plan investment policy. A theoretical paper on the subject with
J. Michael Harrison was completed in 1983. I also became
interested in the return-generating process in the U.S. equity
market, a subject pioneered by Barr Rosenberg, then at the
University of California at Berkeley. This led to an empirical
paper on factors in New York Stock Exchange security returns,
published in 1982. I also began to focus much of my effort on
asset allocation - the allocation of an investor's funds among
major asset classes. To make both the ideas and the technology
more widely available, I prepared a package that included a book,
optimization software and databases, under the title, Asset
Allocation Tools. First published in 1985, it is now offered
both by the original publisher and by Ibbotson Associates in
conjunction with their much larger set of databases.
In 1983, I helped Stanford establish a program in international
investment Management, offered jointly, initially, with the
International Management Institute in Geneva, and later, with the
London Graduate School of Business. The program, extending over a
week, is designed for senior investment professionals wishing to
obtain a thorough grounding in financial economic theory and the
associated empirical research. I served as Co-Director of the
program through 1986 and have participated in subsequent years.
Independently, I also helped create a three-week program for the
Nomura School of Advanced Management, designed to bring much of
the same material to investment professionals in Japan, and
taught in the program for five years. I also assisted Sidney
Cottle, of Financial Research Associates, in preparing seminars
designed to communicate the results of recent research to
investment practitioners.
In 1986, I took a two-year leave from Stanford to found
Sharpe-Russell Research, a firm chartered to perform research and
to develop procedures to help pensions, endowments and
foundations select asset allocations appropriate to their
circumstances and objectives. Supported by several major pension
funds and by the Frank Russell Company, and assisted by a
talented group of professionals, I was able to bring previous
results from the field of financial economics to bear on these
important issues and to provide new theoretical and empirical
material of relevance. Subsequent to this period, the firm's
charter was broadened to include consulting for pensions,
endowments and foundations in the area of asset allocation.
Published work resulting from these activities covered the areas
of integrated asset allocation, dynamic strategies for asset
allocation, factor models for evaluating manager styles and
performance, and liability hedging.
In 1989, I chose to change status, becoming Timken Professor
Emeritus of Finance at Stanford, in order to devote more of my
time to research and consulting activities at William F. Sharpe
Associates, as my firm is now known. While this involves giving
up regular teaching, I have the great fortune to be able to
continue to participate in the intellectual life of the school.
In addition, I can pursue research with a fine group of
colleagues and to provide assistance to (and learn from) a highly
sophisticated group of clients.
It has been my great good luck to be able to work with a number
of organizations in the investment industry. I served as a
Trustee of the College Retirement Equities Fund from 1975 through
1983 and currently serve a trustee for the Research Foundation of
the Institute of Chartered Financial Analysts, a committee member
for the Institute of Quantitative Research in Finance, and a
member of the Council on Education and Research of the Institute
of Chartered Financial Analysts. I also serve as a Strategic
Advisor for Nikko Securities' Institute of Investment Technology
and the Institutional Portfolio Management division of the Union
Bank of Switzerland.
I have also received awards from diverse constituencies. I am
especially proud to have been the recipient of the American Assembly of
Collegiate Schools of Business award for outstanding
contribution to the field of business education in 1980 and the
Financial Analysts' Federation Nicholas Molodovsky Award for
outstanding contributions to the [finance] profession in
1989.
In the course of this long and demanding career, I have enjoyed
the influence and example of my parents and step-parents, all of
whom pursued further education in mid-career. My father retired
as a college president, my mother as an elementary school
principal, and my step-father as a public defender. They taught
me by example the joys associated with learning and with
communicating the results of that learning to others.
I am also fortunate to have two fine children, Deborah and
Jonathan, now grown. Both share a love of learning and of
communicating knowledge to others, although they have chosen
fields far removed from my own. In 1986 I married my wife
Kathryn, an accomplished painter, who shares both my personal and
my professional life - the latter in her capacity as
Administrator of William F. Sharpe Associates. Without her help,
encouragement, and support I truly could not have accomplished
what I have in the last five years. We enjoy sailing, opera and
Stanford football and basketball games, especially when the
weather is good, the music well performed and the opponents
vanquished.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1990, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1991
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1990
MLA style: "William F. Sharpe - Autobiography". Nobelprize.org. 21 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/1990/sharpe-autobio.html
