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Robert C. Merton (born July 31, 1944), a leading scholar in the field of finance, was one of three men
who, in the early 1970s, developed the mathematics of the stock options markets. Merton
published a paper on the subject simultaneous with the publication of another paper, reaching essentially the same conclusions,
by Fischer Black and Myron S. Scholes.
It is somewhat unfair to Merton that the resulting formula has ever since been known as Black-Scholes, but with another hyphen the label would be unwieldy.
Merton and Scholes received The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory
of Alfred Nobel for their work on stock options, in 1997, after Fischer Black's
death.
In 2002, Merton threw himself into the public controversy over how corporations ought to
account for the stock options they often award as parts of a compensation package. Existing rules do not require that these
options be treated as an expense when issued, and some economists suspect that the practice of keeping this particular form of
compensation off the balance sheet contributed to the 1990s bubble in the value of
dot-coms and telecoms. Merton himself is among the advocates of stock options
expensing.
Merton is also the son of Robert K. Merton, a distinguished
sociologist perhaps best known for having coined the phrase "self-fulfilling
prophecy."
Merton was born in New York, New York and received his
Bachelor of Science degree from the prestigious School of Engineering and Applied Science of Columbia University.
See also
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