Showing posts with label michael lewis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label michael lewis. Show all posts

The Prince of Silicon Valley: Frank Quattrone and the Dot-Com Bubble Review

The Prince of Silicon Valley: Frank Quattrone and the Dot-Com Bubble
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
As the hot stocks offered by social media start-ups revive speculative fever on Wall Street, take time to read this wise and cautionary tale of the "dot.com" bubble that collapsed as the current century began. It should be required reading in every business ethics course in the nation's universities.
This book was five careful years in its research and writing but was mostly overlooked when it was published because the book's principal focus -- street-smart Frankie Quattrone of Philadelphia who became the boldest and most successful investment banker doing Internet IPOs in the late 1990s -- had his 2004 criminal conviction overturned by an appeals court in 2006. The tale is still worth the telling and it is told here by one of the best.
The author, Randall Smith, is now the dean of investigative reporters at the Wall Street Journal - and by far the most respected. Smith has won or shared the nation's very highest journalism awards. I was Randy's first editor in the distant 1970s when he first returned to New York City from a tour as a U.S. Naval officer. I was impressed then at his skill and powerful writing. I was even more in awe when I read this careful, detailed account of a financial decade every bit as clever and dangerous as our own.


Click Here to see more reviews about: The Prince of Silicon Valley: Frank Quattrone and the Dot-Com Bubble



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about The Prince of Silicon Valley: Frank Quattrone and the Dot-Com Bubble

Read More...

Zero-Sum Game: The Rise of the World's Largest Derivatives Exchange Review

Zero-Sum Game: The Rise of the World's Largest Derivatives Exchange
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
What a fun, interesting, well-written book! This is not your regular old business book, it is written in first person and has a ton of pop culture references. I raced through the book, enjoyed the plot, loved the character development and couldn't help but learn (and laugh) along the way.
Zero-Sum Game, a book about the merger between Chicago Board of Trade and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, is an interesting read for industry veterans or those who are not part of the financial sector. I liked how Olson provided a quick overview/definition for each term, but then really focused on the fun/more interesting stuff which, again, really sets this book apart.
It is easy to follow, logically written, and kept me at the edge of my seat. I couldn't help feeling like I was along for the ride, as I followed Olson on her journey from her first interview at the Chicago Board of Trade through the day she looked back and noticed that the stature of Ceres appeared as though she was crying. Intricate and colorful character descriptions turn the main players alive and set a vivid stage for the reader.
Zero-Sum Game is one of the best books I've read in a long time. It is candid, captivating and a definite page turner. I'm looking forward to Olson's next book.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Zero-Sum Game: The Rise of the World's Largest Derivatives Exchange



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about Zero-Sum Game: The Rise of the World's Largest Derivatives Exchange

Read More...

Liar's Poker Review

Liar's Poker
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I worked for CSFB for three years, and am still in investment banking for a smaller firm. So I have seen a part of the world that is described here. I'm not saying that this is an exact description of what I saw, because Lewis picks the most exotic creatures that he met, but the atmosphere is perfectly conveyed. This book will tell you all the stuff that they don't teach you in an interview or recruitment visit - the pecking order, the politics, and how to get paid.
The other reason to read this is that Lewis is a brilliant writer, with a real talent for describing people and their situations. Lots of other people have written boring books with the same raw material. For a non-specialist like my mother, the technicalities were hard work, but you don't need a lot of special knowledge to like this book. My mother certainly did.
Probably the best way to look at this book is like a travel book - you're not visiting a country, you're visiting a world. Great travel books are not word-perfect descriptions of a place, they are representations of what the author felt like when he was there, and they give the reader a feeling of what it was like to be there. If you read this book, you will understand what it feels like to work inside a big bank, and you'll enjoy the ride, even if you have no interest in actually working there.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Liar's Poker



Buy NowGet 44% OFF

Click here for more information about Liar's Poker

Read More...

The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine Review

The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Based on reading Michael Lewis' Liar's Poker and Moneyball, I wondered whether The Big Short would prove to be entertaining and informative. If you've read some of Lewis' books, you might agree that the "entertaining" part would seem to be a reasonably safe bet. It turns out, it is. The Big Short is fast-paced, straightforward, conversational and salty--very much like his earlier works. Indeed, if you didn't know Michael Lewis had written this book, you could probably guess it. It is easy reading and very hard to put down. In short (no pun), The Big Short doesn't disappoint in being entertaining.
In a sense, this book is similar to Moneyball in that Lewis tells his story by following a host of characters that most of us have never heard of--people like Steve Eisman (the closest thing to a main character in the book), Vincent Daniel, Michael Burry, Greg Lippmann, Gene Park, Howie Hubler and others.
How informative is the book? Well, it may seem that Lewis has his work cut out for himself, since the events of the recent financial crisis are already well known. More than that, lots of people have their minds made up concerning who the perps of the last few years are--banks and their aggressive managers, "shadow banks" and their even more aggressive managers, hedge funds, credit default swaps, mortgage brokers, the ratings agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the Fed's monetary policy, various federal regulators, short sellers, politicians who over-pushed home ownership, a sensationalist media, the American public that overextending itself with excessive borrowing (or that lied in order to get home loans), housing speculators, etc. The list goes on--and on. Okay, so you already know this. The defining aspect of this book, however, is that it asks (and answers) "Who knew?" about the impending financial crisis beforehand. Who knew--before the financial crisis cracked open for everyone to see (and, perhaps, to panic) in the fall of 2008--that a silent crash in the bond market and real estate derivatives market was playing out? Indeed, the good majority of this book addresses events that occurred before Lehman's failure in September of 2008. In describing what led up to the darkest days of the crisis, Lewis does a good job helping the reader to see how the great financial storm developed. All in all, this is an informative book.
Interestingly, in the book's prologue, Salomon Brothers alumnus Lewis explains how, after he wrote Liar's Poker over 20 years ago, he figured he had seen the height of financial folly. However, even he was surprised by the much larger losses suffered in the recent crisis compared to the 1980s, which seem almost like child's play now.
For a taste of The Big Short, Steve Eisman was a blunt-spoken "specialty finance" research analyst at Oppenheimer and Co., originally in the 1990s, and he eventually helped train analyst Meredith Whitney, who most people associate with her string of negative reports on the banking industry, primarily from late 2007. Giving a flavor of his style, Eisman claims that one of the best lines he wrote back in the early 1990s was, "The [XYZ] Financial Corporation is a perfectly hedged financial institution--it loses money in every conceivable interest rate environment." His own wife described him as being "not tactically rude--he's sincerely rude." Vinny Daniel worked as a junior accountant in the 1990s (and eventually worked for Eisman), and he found out how complicated (and risky) Wall Street firms were when he tried to audit them. He was one of the early analysts to notice the high default rates on manufactured home loans, which led to Eisman writing a 1997 report critical of subprime originators. Michael Burry (later Dr. Michael Burry) was, among other things, a bond market researcher in 2004 who studied Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger, and who correctly assessed the impact of "teaser rates" and interest rate re-sets on subprime loans. In 2005, Burry wrote to his Scion Capital investors that, "Sometimes markets err big time." How right he would be.
Greg Lippmann was a bond trader for Deutsche Bank, who discussed with Eisman ways to bet against the subprime mortgage market. Before home prices declined, he noted, for example, that people whose homes appreciated 1 - 5% in value were four times more likely to default than those whose homes appreciated over 10%. In other words, home prices didn't need to actually fall for problems to develop. (Of course, home prices fell a lot.) When Lippmann mentioned this to a Deutsche Bank colleague, he was called a Chicken Little. To which, Lippmann retorted, "I'm short your house!" He did this by buying credit default swaps on the BBB-rated tranches (slices) of subprime mortgage bonds. If that's not a mouthful, read further in the book for a description of Goldman Sachs and "synthetic subprime mortgage bond-backed CDOs." Then there's the AIG Financial Products story, told through the story of Gene Park, who worked at AIG, and his volatile boss, Joe Cassano.
Did I say this book is informative? Here's a bit more: Did you know that a pool of mortgages, each with a 615 FICO score, performs very differently (and better) than a pool of mortgages with half of the loans with a 550 FICO score and half with a 680 FICO score (for a 615 average)? If you think about it, the 550/680 pool is apt to perform significantly worse, because more of the 550 FICO score loans develop problems. Think about how that got gamed.
There's more, but hopefully you've gotten the point. This is a very interesting, entertaining and informative book that accomplishes what it sets out to do. Chances are you'll enjoy it.


Click Here to see more reviews about: The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine



Buy NowGet 45% OFF

Click here for more information about The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine

Read More...

Short Review

Short
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
"Wall Street" meets "The Office," says the book jacket of Cortright McMeel's novel. I'm not sure about that. Though I know where the publicists are coming from, for me it's more "Wall Street" meets "The Sopranos" (or "Dexter"). By that I'm referring to the novel's ferocious bite, its view of the world tinted by dark humor.
In his debut novel, McMeel features a group of Boston-based energy traders, a stunning cast of larger than life individuals bound with impulses they can't control. All seem to have a knack for putting themselves in thorny situations.
McMeel's writing style is crisp and clean, the short paragraphs and compact scenes bursting with energy (no pun intended). The fluid prose, as well as the sharp, dead-on dialogue, makes for an extremely pleasant reading experience. Some of the scenes are wildly entertaining, while others are disturbing, filled with moments of genuine drama. It's a particularly harrowing universe that's been created, but McMeel's sharp tongue-in-cheek humor (hence "The Office") and eye for people's quirks and foibles counterbalance the darkness.
At times absurd and always trenchant, "Short" is a powerful, multi-layered novel that's going to take you for one hell of a ride.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Short



Buy NowGet 60% OFF

Click here for more information about Short

Read More...