Showing posts with label leverage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leverage. Show all posts

Inventing Money: The Story of Long-Term Capital Management and the Legends Behind It Review

Inventing Money: The Story of Long-Term Capital Management and the Legends Behind It
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While Lowenstein's account of the Long-Term Capital Management debacle is more fascinating, Dunbar's book provides more "meat" for those interested in the backdrop of the historical event. Starting with a brief history of speculation and progressing to finance theory, "Inventing Money" places the Long-Term saga in a historical context. Indeed, almost half of the text has nothing to do with Long-Term directly, but Long-Term was not created in isolation. People from academia and "the Street" made its existence possible, and this book chronicles its development very well.
A bit more technical than "When Genius Failed," this book gives the reader lots of background material on the theory behind what Long-Term was supposed to do: namely, arbitrage. As a Ph.D. student of financial economics, I found Dunbar's explanations easy to understand, but I can also see that they will be quite obfuscating to non-specialists in this area. The second part, about Long-Term's dealings, is easier to understand for everyone. While his account of what transpired to Long-Term is not as vivid as Lowenstein's, I think Dunbar does a laudable job at keeping the story flowing. BTW, the paperback addition has a thoroughly updated last chapter, "Aftermath."
If you are interested in the Long-Term story, both books are worth keeping. If you have to choose, go with "Inventing Money" if you are also interested in the history of finance theory and financial engineering; if you prefer an "insider's view," "When Genius Failed" would be a better choice.

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LTCM was the fund that was too big to fail, the brightest star in the financial world. Built on genius, by legends of Wall Street and two Nobel laureates, it spiralled to ever greater heights, commanding unimaginable wealth. When it fell to earth in September 1998 it shook the world. This is the story of the rise and fall of LTCM and the legends behind it. A brave and ambitious work, Inventing Money was written by leading financial journalist Nicholas Dunbar.

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Trader's guide to the repo market Review

Trader's guide to the repo market
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This paperback book is intended to be a useful primer for both bond traders and investors involved in the enormous US bond- and derivatives-backed repurchase agreement (repo) market. It contains information on how repos are constructed and how they work, as well as discussing the many repo-related defaults that ended up forcing major structural changes in how the instrument is priced as well as forcing the creation of legal contracts that have ensured greater safety for investors since the mid 1980s. Repos were the single instrument that allowed many investment firms and hedge funds to leverage themselves up so they could underwrite huge positions in exotic derivatives ahead of the 2008 default. It's a book about leverage and its inherent risks and how everyone, even individual investors, probably has been an "owner" of a repo at some point. That's because even most large mutual funds also use the overnight repo market as a venue in which to park cash and receive a market return. Though out of print, the book is still available through etaylorrepo@gmail.com.

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