Showing posts with label wall street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wall street. Show all posts

Hacking Wall Street: Attacks And Countermeasures (Volume 2) Review

Hacking Wall Street: Attacks And Countermeasures (Volume 2)
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This book should be REQUIRED reading for any security professional in the online brokerage or online banking industry. It is also a very good and relevant read for people in the online e-commerce world, like Amazon, eBay, Facebook, etc. It is appropriate for both technical security professionals as well as non-technical professional involved on the business or fraud side of the world.
The author takes you through a five year history of online brokerage fraud that it seems he has personally been fighting for years. He surveys all the different security counter measures out in the field today, and in essence shows you how all existing traditional approaches are in-effective. But do not despare, he does discuss a few new approaches on the horizon that might help.
Botton line. Thumps up. Great read.

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In this one of a kind book, the author exposes the who, what, why and how of today's professional hackers as they attempt and often succeed in stealing the identities of millions of consumers and swindle Wall Street's largest financial services firms out of millions of dollars. For the first time, look inside the world of the new generation cyber criminal with detailed descriptions of modern phishing toolkits, Trojans, pump and dump schemes and advanced malware distribution systems. Follow the author on a trip through the cyber criminal underground and understand how they find and attack a broad array of chinks that exist in even the most sophisticated security networks of today's largest companies and quite likely exist in your own IT security armor. In the final chapters, look into the future of cyber criminal activity as well as the advanced countermeasures being developed to check them.

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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
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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.


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The Other Side of Wall Street: In Business It Pays to Be an Animal, In Life It Pays to Be Yourself Review

The Other Side of Wall Street: In Business It Pays to Be an Animal, In Life It Pays to Be Yourself
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I confess I didn't know who Todd Harrison was when I got this book. I'd been to Minyanville a few times and I thought that the iconic stock market characters Hoofy and Boos were fun. As a former finance professor turned trader who develops his own ideas, I wasn't likely to be receptive to his slender volume of reminiscences.
Instead, I was surprised and enthralled by the story of Todd's life starting with being brought up in a fractured family where his grandfather became his surrogate father. After a brief adolescent interlude with his estranged father, the story moves rapidly to the college years at Syracuse and thence to being a clueless entry-level hire at Morgan Stanley.
Clueless or not, he rapidly learns and builds relationships to become a star options and derivatives trader, first at Morgan, then at Galleon and finally at Cramer-Berkowitz. I found this book engrossing and impossible to put down as I read about his rapidly increasing financial rewards and his equally rapidly increasing cognitive dissonance and conflicts.
The writing is very straightforward and linear but along the way we learn about Todd's grandfather Ruby, his father's demons, Jim Cramer, September 11th and finally his journey from writing for the Street to putting together Minyanville.
This book reminds me a little of "Reminiscences of a Stock Operator". Both are slender volumes but Harrison's book is much more open about revealing his conflicts and demons. Maybe if Jesse Livermore could similarly have used writing as method of self-discovery his life might not have ended in suicide.
Could this all be a con? Could he be selling us a bill of goods as self-justification? I suppose so - but somehow I think not. I think we have actually been granted an honest insight into what it is to be Todd Harrison.

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Minyanville Mediafounder and former hedge fund honcho Todd Harrison shares amazing untold stories from Wall Street's hidden side. From the adrenaline rush of trading at Morgan Stanley, to trench warfare with Galleon and Jim Cramer to valuable lessons about money and life, Harrison provides unforgettable tales from the most tumultuous era in financial history!As seen on Bloomberg Television's "Taking Stock."

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The Complete Guide to Capital Markets for Quantitative Professionals (McGraw-Hill Library of Investment and Finance) Review

The Complete Guide to Capital Markets for Quantitative Professionals (McGraw-Hill Library of Investment and Finance)
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It is crucial to the success of a technologist on Wall Street to have a fluent understanding of the traders they support: More focused feature sets are developed, faster communication with traders (they have about a 2-second attention span) and correct assumptions are made.
Unfortunately, working in technology tends to isolate oneself from the trading floor. This is not necessary. Although, there are plenty of classics out there (read Fabozzi), they don't target the technologist who hasn't grown up on the trading floor. They still don't answer the questions, "Why would you do that", "What's the purpose", "What's driving everything"
This book turns the whole model upside down. The author goes into a very detailed and interesting history of the markets first. Then goes into the main areas any financial group handles: Treasuries, Futures, Interest Rate, Agencies, Options, Corporates (We won't mention mortgage).
After reading just the Treasuries and Futures section, I IMMEDIATELY saw a difference in my ability to communicate with the desk. I was able to suggest alternative approaches concerning enhancements and features, understand when problems arose, plus I actually understood EVERYTHING the trader said.
If you work in technology, be it QA, Software Development or even technology management, this is a must read.
Best of all, it's a great read. I found myself looking forward to reading the book every single day.
Enjoy

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The Complete Guide to Capital Markets for Quantitative Professionals is a comprehensive resource for readers with a background in science and technology who want to transfer their skills to thefinancial industry.

It is written in a clear, conversational style and requires no prior knowledge of either finance or financial analytics. The book beginsby discussing the operation of the financial industry and the business models of different types of Wall Street firms, as well as the jobroles those with technical backgrounds can fill in those firms. Then it describes the mechanics of how these firms make money trading themain financial markets (focusing on fixed income, but also covering equity, options and derivatives markets), and highlights the ways inwhich quantitative professionals can participate in this money-makingprocess. The second half focuses on the main areas of Wall Streettechnology and explains how financial models and systems are created, implemented, and used in real life. This is one of the few books that offers a review of relevant literature and Internet resources.


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Infectious Greed: How Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets Review

Infectious Greed: How Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets
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Exeptional! A great history of the deception of Wall Street. It looks like an intimidating book at close to 400 pages but it is absolutely captivating. The sad conclusion however is that nothing has changed and Wall Street continues to use us as rats in its financial labratory. And the government, rating agencies and accounting firms sit on the sidelines collecting fines and fees. I only mildly disagree with his conclusions on Efficient Market Hypothesis which I don't think concluded markets were rational.

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A Colossal Failure of Common Sense: The Inside Story of the Collapse of Lehman Brothers Review

A Colossal Failure of Common Sense: The Inside Story of the Collapse of Lehman Brothers
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Two kinds of people are likely to be attracted to this book: the common man in the street who wants to know how a company like Lehman blew up so spectacularly and the financial markets insider who wants to know the inside scoop.
If you are the former, this book is likely to please. It has all the elements of a pot boiler - the breathless accounts of secret meetings, mutiny in the boardroom and the heroic efforts of a few key guys trying valiantly to save the sinking ship. It has the relentless enemy and the arch villain. The only thing missing is the scantily clad woman draped over the hero's arm.
The other side of the barbell is the financial services insider who knows all the acronyms inside and out - CDO, CLO, RMBS, CMBS, SIV who is nevertheless looking for a straight account of what went wrong - like the classic 'smartest guys in the room' on the Enron disaster.
If you are on that side of the barbell, steer clear of this book. It offers no insight into anything, except perhaps the massive ego of a low level trader. By all accounts, Larry McDonald should never have been allowed to place the kind of bets he claims to have made. He was obviously a junior trader on a bond desk that used shareholder money to short everything in sight taking massive short CDS positions on all sorts of names, good and bad. The irony seems entirely lost to him, but his desk was part of the CDS problem - buying protection with no underlying holdings.
Like any gambler, he worships the analyst (Jane Castle) who gave him the hot tip - (Buy Delta, young man!) but is too dumb to acknowledge that Delta could easily have woundup another Eastern, or more to the point, another TWA. The 'hostile' bid from US Airways that made his profit, nearly killed US Airways... but I digress.
Larry does let his political persuasions come through. Clinton is an arch villain for letting Roberta Achtenberg loose on banks 'forcing' them to lend to the huddled masses. 'Easy mortgages were the invention of Bill Clinton's Democrats' he proclaims. Never mind that the CRA ran for over 12 years with nary a problem until the boneheads on Wall Street decided to get in on the action by securitizing it.
Perhaps the most telling passage comes in the tail end of the book and summarizes it quite well:
"All my life, I've been a laissez-faire Ronald Reagan / Margaret Thatcher capitalist, swearing by the market, taking the risks and the devil take the hindmost. But this one time, I was looking for a Givernment rescue and I wasn't going to get it"
This one time. When my stock value is at stake, the principles I held all my life just vaporized. Hank Paulson should have cared more about my stock options in Lehman. That son-of-a-bitch was making an example out of Lehman with *MY* money.
This book is a lousy excuse for a tell-all or even a straight accounting of the events leading up to Lehman;s demise. 'When Genius Failed' this ain't.

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ECONned: How Unenlightened Self Interest Undermined Democracy and Corrupted Capitalism Review

ECONned: How Unenlightened Self Interest Undermined Democracy and Corrupted Capitalism
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I've written quite a bit about the financial crisis, and God knows I've read nearly every book on the subject, and I have no hesitation in saying that if there is one book that gets it whole, and gets it right, and is THE book for the intelligent, thoughtful reader to turn to, it is ECONNED. This is not an anecdotal recitation of deal gossip (like, for example, Sorkin's book); it's not "source-based" journalism reflective of the way certain participants in the dire events that unfolded in 2007-2009 wish themselves to be seen. It lays out, in what is easily as clear, as direct, as smart and with as much force of fact as any financial writing today how exactly the fun and games that have nearly wrecked our economy and the lives of so many of us went down. Yves Smith is, unlike so many other writers feeding off the crisis, writing about it from the inside: with an unfailing grasp of where the details (where the devil lurks) fit into the larger pattern of financial perfidy and destruction, in this Doomsday Machine that Wall Street put together. The intelligent reader will understand that if you want to know why you're suffering from acute ptomaine, you have to understand what went into the sausage you got it from. And then you have to be made to see plain the kind of restaurant or market that serves up this toxic offal. And then the regulatory failures that allow such places to be licensed. We have undergone one of the great crises in this nation's history. It needs to be seen plain and understood. Deadline-driven blahblahblah won't get the job done. But ECONNED does. I cannot recommend it highly enough.

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Naked Option Review

Naked Option
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Joe Kolman, Naked Option (Harriman House, 2007)
I don't know how it is I came to start reading this odd subgenre known as the corporate thriller. (Okay, I do-- it's all Joe Finder's fault. But I digress.) I know as much about corporate culture as I do about quantum physics, and to be honest, I find quantum physics a lot more interesting. So why is it that the corporate thrillers I read end up capturing my imagination? It's more impressive when the book in question really delves into the world it's floating atop, instead of simply using it as the backdrop for a conventional thriller plot. That's the case with Joe Kolman's Naked Option, which goes into all kinds of detail on, well, everything, from stock trading to Jewish marriage customs-- and somehow it's all utterly engrossing.Yes, I'm as confused by that statement as you are, but I guarantee you-- if you pick up Naked Option, you'll find it just as riveting as I did. I mean, come on, it's a corporate thriller blurbed by Alison Lurie. How can you go wrong?
David Ackerman is not having a good month. He lost his bank $112 million in the wake of September 11, and subsequently lost his job (and his Series 7 license). His girlfriend has moved across the country to take a job as a film critic. Not a good time to be Dave Ackerman, that's for sure. But a corporate lawyer looking for a sharp options trader gives him a break and an auditing job, trying to find out how someone on the trading floor is scamming money from the bank. He doesn't know it's happening for sure, but he strongly suspects, and Dave and his new partner, Susanna Cassuto, are the bloodhounds he sets on the trail. Can we say 'rebound relationship", kiddies? We certainly can! But there's something different about Susanna. And something very different about this scammer. Especially when, just when Dave and Susanna are on the brink of catching him, he turns up dead...
Kolman has a knack for explaining stuff and making the explanations work. I don't know how that happens, but it does. The amount that I know about stock options is nil, pretty much, but I know what one is, and the basics of trading them. So I'm not a complete amateur. And yet Kolman's explanations of the process didn't seem as if he were talking down to the reader, which is impressive. Even more impressive is that the explanatory sections of the book, which are often a pace-killer in the extreme, don't slow things down here at all. Part of the reason for this is, likely, that the book is slower-paced in general than your average thriller-- Kolman's wall street is not the adrenaline-fueled world of a Joe Finder novel. There's a mystery to be solved, that mystery gets more complex, and the book's pace matches Dave Ackerman's-- he's got no idea what he's doing in this world, save trying to make a paycheck and falling in love with Susanna Cassuto, and the book's pace matches Dave's-- hesitant and fumbling one minute, decisive (and headstrong) the next. That may sound like a criticism, It isn't meant as one. It's quite a performance on Kolman's part, and I find it impressive.
The one thing that bugged me is what I perceived as the book's attitude towards gay characters. Now, I rush to say I'm 99% sure that Kolman's take here is that the characters who dismiss the murder as a "gay crime" are buffoons, or at least well-meant folks who have their brains in the wrong place, and that Dave's sexual confusion as he gets farther into the case is meant to help us identify with him somewhat (at least, those of us who've been in that same confused state). Overall, I think the book is meant to be sympathetic, in some general sense, to its gay characters. Certainly, two of the most likable guys we meet in the book are gay. But there's still a kind of undercurrent that made me less than comfortable a time or two. And again I say, that may well have been meant-- we're supposed to be offended at the bullheaded police detective, whose aggressive dismissal of the case as a gay crime borders on the homophobic. But it just rubbed me the wrong way sporadically. Your mileage may (and I'm sure it will) vary.
That said, though, I sailed through this one in two days. It is readable, compelling, very well-plotted, and very good stuff. Recommended. ****


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Dave Ackerman, the narrator of "Naked Option", is a brilliant trader but one day, recklessly trying to one-up his firm's superstar, he goes naked on an option trade and loses $112 million in two hours. His career is over. Then he hears about an auditing job at an investment bank. He knows within minutes that something is very wrong, but he's so desperate, he takes the job. His new partner is Susanna Cassuto, an attractive young auditor he tags as a rich party girl. But on the couch with the lights off, she becomes something else - awkward and inexperienced. What is going on? Together, they discover the elegant embezzlement scheme going on: one trader is working inside with a partner outside. When somebody turns up dead, Dave and Susanna race to put the pieces together - but the bank drops the case. They're fired. Furious, Dave goes out on his own to find the killer. But the killer finds him first.

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Study Guide for Trading for a Living: Psychology, Trading Tactics, Money Management Review

Study Guide for Trading for a Living: Psychology, Trading Tactics, Money Management
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Sometimes I read a book and think I understand its author's ideas... but 2 weeks later only vaguely recall what i read. Dr Elder's STUDY GUIDE did a fantastic job of exposing my blind spots. Each of its questions is referenced to a specific chapter in the book. He shows you charts and puts you into trading situations, then asks, what will you do? He tells you not only what answers are correct but why they are correct and why others are wrong! The self-rating scales at the end of each chapter showed me exactly where I stood and what I needed to do next. A great follow-up to TRADING FOR A LIVING!

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Liar's Poker Review

Liar's Poker
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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.

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The Greatest Trade Ever: The Behind-the-Scenes Story of How John Paulson Defied Wall Street and Made Financial History Review

The Greatest Trade Ever: The Behind-the-Scenes Story of How John Paulson Defied Wall Street and Made Financial History
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This is an incredible book about John Paulson, and in general, the trade against the housing market. This is a great read for anyone who is interested in how an investment thesis is constructed and executed.
There were two pleasant surprises of the book:
1. Cast of Characters - How different investors, besides John Paulson, also saw the similar trade opportunity and went for it. As the crisis unfolded John Paulson, George Soros and a host of other investors were revealed to have been shorting the housing market. The surprise was learning about the host of other, "unknown" investors from a medical school dropout to a cocky Deutsche Bank trader to wealthy real-estate mogul to a recently graduated MBA, each of whom recognized the crisis before most others and were able to trade against the rest of the investment community.
2. The transformation of John Paulson - He was initially described someone who was smart, but not as someone who always "had to be the best" or a natural leader; in other words he was not the classic alpha male.John Paulson was portrayed as a random i-banker with awkward communication skills, a weak handshake and an affinity for the NYC club scene. Many actually saw his career as stalled and unexceptional. The book is very good at showing how he transformed himself from a run of the mill finance professional to someone whose ambition grew and grew....and once he saw the opportunity he calmly executed his trade and transformed his life.
(A small side note...this is also the one of the best books describing the technical terms of the housing crisis (e.g. CDS, MBS).)
Finally, even though the ending is essentially known (the collapse of the housing market), the description and narrative of the sequence of events is riveting.
A great read for anyone interested in finance, the markets, and the real estate crash.

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In 2006, hedge fund manager John Paulson realized something few others suspected--that the housing market and the value of subprime mortgages were grossly inflated and headed for a major fall. Paulson's background was in mergers and acquisitions, however, and he knew little about real estate or how to wager against housing. He had spent a career as an also-ran on Wall Street. But Paulson was convinced this was his chance to make his mark. He just wasn't sure how to do it. Colleagues at investment banks scoffed at him and investors dismissed him. Even pros skeptical about housing shied away from the complicated derivative investments that Paulson was just learning about. But Paulson and a handful of renegade investors such as Jeffrey Greene and Michael Burry began to bet heavily against risky mortgages and precarious financial companies. Timing is everything, though. Initially, Paulson and the others lost tens of millions of dollars as real estate and stocks continued to soar. Rather than back down, however, Paulson redoubled his bets, putting his hedge fund and his reputation on the line. In the summer of 2007, the markets began to implode, bringing Paulson early profits, but also sparking efforts to rescue real estate and derail him. By year's end, though, John Paulson had pulled off the greatest trade in financial history, earning more than $15 billion for his firm--a figure that dwarfed George Soros's billion-dollar currency trade in 1992. Paulson made billions more in 2008 by transforming his gutsy move. Some of the underdog investors who attempted the daring trade also reaped fortunes. But others who got the timing wrong met devastating failure, discovering that being early and right wasn't nearly enough. Written by the prizewinning reporter who broke the story in The Wall Street Journal, The Greatest Trade Ever is a superbly written, fast-paced, behind-the-scenes narrative of how a contrarian foresaw an escalating financial crisis--that outwitted Chuck Prince, Stanley O'Neal, Richard Fuld, and Wall Street's titans--to make financial history.From the Hardcover edition.

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The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine Review

The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine
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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.


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Wall Street Lingo: Thousands of Investment Terms Explained Simply Review

Wall Street Lingo: Thousands of Investment Terms Explained Simply
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I found the title of this book deceiving in the best way possible. Wall Street Lingo is more a guided tour of Wall Street and its inner workings than a simple glossary of investment terms and lingo. Any novice to intermediate investor will benefit from Peterson's backstage pass to one of the world's most lucrative investment forums.
Peterson keeps an otherwise dry and heavy read manageable with her extremely user-friendly format; on top of dividing the over 1000 defined investment terms into logical chapters, a full index at the back of the book makes for quick referencing. At first glance, the sheer number of topics covered seems intimidating to the financially untrained eye. However, the step-by-step approach demystifies every aspect of investment, from the basics of exchange operations to interpreting financial statements to paying the tax man. Charts, tables and explanations of key strategies interspersed throughout the definitions in each chapter help to drive home important points. Those in need of extra investment help will find plenty of additional resources tucked into the back of the book, with lists of acronym definitions, investor resources and relevant publications.
Wall Street Lingo delivered all that it promised and more. The up to date instruction and information is sure to benefit any potential or practicing investor wise enough to develop their investment knowledge before hitting the market. The way the information is presented is the icing on the cake, as even a beginner can navigate the guide and come out confident in their financial prowess in the end.


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Finally, a finance dictionary compiled with the individual investor in mind. Wall Street Lingo does more than define the terms your stockbroker, the Wall Street Journal and CNBC pitch at you, it explains them in a way that traditional dictionaries can not. Where other dictionaries start at A and end at Z, Wall Street Lingo is organized in chapters, by subject. It begins where you begin with a topic that has piqued your curiosity and ends only when your curiosity has been satisfied. Have you ever wondered about the difference between CPI and PPI? In other dictionaries, you ll find the definitions 200 pages apart. Wall Street Lingo brings them together in the chapter Economics for Investors. EBITDA. Gross Profit. Net Profit. Shareholders Equity. You could waste precious time searching for explanations to help you analyze a company s financial condition. Or you can open Wall Street Lingo to the chapter Decoding Financial Statements. If you think technical analysis is only for the pros, flip to the chapter Technically Speaking for dozens of plain English translation to stock chart terms like Bollinger bands, MACD, Elliott wave theory and Bearish Divergence. It might change your mind. Whether you re an experienced investor or are exploring the market for the first time, you ll appreciate the easy-reading style and unique structure of this innovative investment tool. - Over 1,000 terms individual investors need to know and understand for profitable investing - Definitions organized by topic - Fully indexed and cross-referenced - Exhaustive list of commonly used acronyms - Helpful resources, complete with websites Wall Street Lingo is an essential reference that translates the jargon used on Wall Street into direct, easy to understand, Main Street language and organizes it the way you use it.

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Lessons From the Trader Wizard Review

Lessons From the Trader Wizard
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If you have traded for some time don't use money and time on this book. This book is for the beginner who wants to have some understanding of the markets. It is very superficial in its description.

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Part 1 What is the Market? What is Trading?1. Getting your head around capital markets and your place in itWhat is the market?Stop listening & talking; start reading & thinking, then doing2. Deciding to self-trade securities, get help, or do a little in betweenDo you really want to be a professional trader?3. Choosing your advisor carefullyChoosing advice & administration from the sell-sideLicensed buy-side portfolio managerChoosing a fee-based financial plannerAdopting a published portfolio: A case of the blind leading the blindMarket advisory letters: A few things to know4. The purchase of investment products called mutual fundsThe case for mutual fundsThe case against mutual fundsOpen-end load fundsOpen-end no-load funds5. So, Mr. Trader, you decided to take control of your own affairsBuilding a trading planThree basic aspects of markets you will have to learnFive mistakes even professional traders makeA strategy for the conservativehow to deal with inflationA strategy for the enterprising trader; zero in on corporate managementA strategy for the speculative trader; seeking hidden opportunityPart 2 Cara s Approach to Trading Bonds, Bond Funds & Cash1. What is a bond?How interest is calculated & paidHow bonds are ratedDifferences in bondsHow to read bond quotations & figure yieldsAbout prices & yields of bondsWhat you should consider before trading bondsThe relative safety of fixed income securitiesGuidelines for trading the bond marketThe yield curve2. Choosing between bonds & bond fundsOpen-end bond fundsClosed-end bond fundsRetractable bond fundsHigh-yield bond fundsBond ETFs3. Money market funds: Cash is an asset class tooPutting money to work to preserve capital & beat inflationPart 3 Trading Stocks (Also Called Equities)1. Macro-economics: where public and private sectors meetTrying to understand economics, the Fed & the marketEconomic analysis protocols I ve used for over 20 years & still recommend2. Fundamental (Corporate) DataHow to read & analyze corporate financial dataHow to read a corporate balance sheetHow to read the statement of incomeQuick review of corporate resultsA proposed set of financial statements3. Combining Corporate and Market Data for Quantitative AnalysisThe quant gurus The automated decision system gurus 4. Technical (Market Data Analysis)Technical analysis studiesWhen dealing in price series data, the subject is timingUnderstanding my approach to technical analysis5. How equity markets are sliced & diced6. CountriesTrading considerations of foreign stocksTrading considerations for Dow 30 stock watchersCanadian stocksLatin American stocksBritish and European stocksAsia-Pacific stocks7. Knowing the playing fieldA rising tide floats all boats (and vice versa)A study of market interrelationshipsFastest moving industries and groupsBuying big-cap stocks and ETFsBuying small-cap and mid-cap stocks and ETFs8. Selecting equity mutual fundsThe importance of what to buy9. About growthSearch for growth-oriented common stocksDifferentiating the valuation of growth from priceHow stupid can one get?How to relate future earnings and current market pricesA growth stock price evaluatorFinding growth stocks objectivelySeeking growth from well-established companiesFinding growth potential in unseasoned companies10. About Value11. Growth + Approximate Fair Value = Quality [the Cara 100 concept]12. The Importance of What to Buy13. About Timing: The Cara Market Phases Model and Oscillator14. Preferred, Rights & Warrants15. Special Situations16. The How To guidelines on the Mechanics of Buying & SellingPart Four

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Short Review

Short
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"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.


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The Stock Market Philosopher: Insights of a Soviet-Born, New York-Bred Hedge Fund Trader Review

The Stock Market Philosopher: Insights of a Soviet-Born, New York-Bred Hedge Fund Trader
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Interesting book to read. Being from former soviet union myself, I read fantiki part with some nostalgic memories. There is nothing original about what Gennady wrote - all is on the net, what is interesting is that he combined some of the major financials cliche in one book, which is not big, and dispelled them very cleverly. The book was fun to read, and thanks to NYC Subway delays :), I read it in few trips.
I day trade futures, and lost all financial naivete a long time ago, but majority still holds it. The current financial crisis might (just might not will) change things around. Books like this one need to be promoted because an average person can read it, enjoy it and what is most important understand its concepts, and as a result make better financial decisions. The publisher and author should do a better job in promoting it. I accidentally saw the preview in Futures magazine and thus bought it.
The only thing I wish Gennady went into is his experience in algo trading, but that would make the book very interesting for someone like me, and boring for many others.

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The Day Trader: A Novel Review

The Day Trader: A Novel
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I read this by chance and made a lucky strike! Mr. Lentz quickly swept me into the rollercoaster world of the Market. His characters take you with them down unpredictable paths. I'm looking forward to more books from David Lentz. Don't be afraid of the formulas in the appendices. They are fun.

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Dr. Rich Proffette of the Wharton School in 1999 discovers the Holy Grail of Wall Street: a breakthrough stock trading algorithm with an uncanny ability to predict stock price movements. His trading model, Market Equilibrium Shock Theory, is widely hailed as one of the great economic ciphers of the 20th century and has rewarded him with a vast fortune amid Wall Street's longest Bull Market rampage. Powerful peoplecovet his precious algorithm from underworld hackers to global banks and the U.S. government: all want to seize his priceless intellectual property.The one true love of his life, Katherine North, is a stunning, gifted, Wharton grad student,who co-invented the algorithm. She knows a dark secret which may cost him everything. Take a random walk down Market Street in the City of Brotherly Love as this comic novel engages you inday tradingon Wall Street. "Lentz is a novelist whose knowledge of the inner workings of Wall Street and day trading fuels his plots." - Greenwich Time "A talent for blending a compelling story line with pathos and humor."-The Greenwich Post "A 21st century, digital metaphor."- The Redding Pilot "Lentz's approach to writing is soul driven."- The Weston Forum "He does not manufacture cookie-cutter best-sellers."- The Wilton Bulletin "Super entertainment, a real page turner. Before you know it, you are immersed in the day trader's world and fascinated by the action." - J.C. Ackerman, CEO, Day Trader "For those who have worked on Wall Street or have merely owned a few shares in perplexing markets this book hits home."- Professor Joseph Connolly, MBA, Paris

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