How to get involved in the Daily deal industry.
How To Survive Inflation With The Rising Cost Of Food
Global Warming - Or how really really bad things are going to happen and how to stop them
The Secret On How To Get Rich From The Internet
News Miner How To Profit From Trading The News
Betta Fish Learn How to Give Your Betta the Great Life.pdf
Total-brain Leadership and Innovation - How to be successful in the knowledge economy
How to get ahead in the Apple App Store by mogeneration for mobile monday Sydney 04/05/2009
500 Key Words for the SAT, and How to Remember Them Forever! by Charles Gulotta
Methods To Make Money In The Daily Deal Industry
“This enjoyable, fast-moving book is concise, relevant, and perceptive. My bottom line is a simple one: This book should be read by all those interested in the way markets operate, be they investors, analysts, or policy makers.”
From the Foreword by Mohamed A. El-Erian, CEO and co-CIO of PIMCO, and author of When Markets Collide
“This book is a must-read for anyone concerned about how we can avoid recurring debt-induced busts in the years ahead, or anyone who wonders how to invest if (when!) the crisis returns. Authers’ insights on the global financial crisis are profound.”
Robert D. Arnott, Chairman, Research Affiliates, LLC, and author of The Fundamental Index: A Better Way to Invest
“This book illustrates the dangers to investors who fail to recognize that global asset markets have become more synchronized over time. In a crowded field of works on the financial crisis, Authers’ work is unique in both its insight and style.”
Robert R. Johnson, Ph.D., CFA, Senior Managing Director of the CFA Institute
“John Authers has combined his journalistically honed FT skills with great insights. Serious investors and policymakers should read this book.”
David R. Kotok, Chairman and Chief Investment Officer of Cumberland Advisors
“John masterfully drives a stake through the myth of global economic decoupling one chapter and example at a time. A must-read in today’s economy.”
Vitaliy Katsenelson, Director of Research at Investment Management Associates, Inc, author of Active Value Investing: Making Money in Range-Bound Markets
Are we barreling toward another massive global financial catastrophe?
How can so many bubbles form all at once? Why are so many “disconnected” markets now capable of collapsing in unison? In this remarkably readable book, award-winning Financial Times columnist John Authers takes on these critical questions and offers deeply sobering answers.
Authers reveals how the first truly global super bubble was inflated--and might now be inflating again. He illuminates the multiple roots of repeated financial crises: a massive shift in investing power from individuals to big institutions; the migration of key decisions from banks to capital markets; the wholesale financialization of many asset classes; and fundamental failures of both theory and policy.
The Fearful Rise of Markets presents a truly global view, avoiding oversimplifications and ideology as it outlines how we got here and where we stand. Even more valuable, it offers realistic solutions--for decision-makers who want to prevent disaster and investors who want to survive it.
• The herd grows ever larger--and more dangerous
How institutional investing, indexing, and efficient markets theory promote herding
• Cheap money and irrational exuberance
Super fuel for super bubbles
• Too big to fail: the whole story of moral hazard
Banks, hedge funds, and beyond
• Danger signs of the next bubble
Forex, equity, credit, and commodity markets move once more in alignment
My first impression of The Fearful Rise of Markets--apart from asking myself just how many books concerning the recent economic and market turmoil have been written in the last 12 months--is that this is a very fast and easy read. There are about two dozen short chapters, each averaging six or seven pages, with each chapter followed by very short, bulleted summary points. (Even if you didn't realize the author, John Authers, is the investments editor of the Financial Times, you'd soon guess that he is used to writing short blurbs on a variety of economic and investment topics.) Frankly, having read enough market meltdown books in the last several months, I was prepared to be unimpressed with this book. It turns out, however, I am impressed. Although the book does not plow a lot of new ground, it does cover many topics that are important to an understanding of the interconnectedness of markets (and the world economy). Although your reaction to this book may be different than... read more
If you are an investor who is looking for answers to how we got into the mess we are in, and better yet what the future may look like, this is the book for you. John Authers has done the best job I've seen of explaining how and why the latest financial crisis occurred. His writing style is very concise and extremely easy to understand. Even better, I think he has put out there enough knowledge and ideas, so that the investor will understand what forces are moving the markets and the implications for the future. Read this book, then reevaluate your own investment strategies and plans for the future.
The author, John Authers, has been a financial correspondent for the Financial Times, one of the world's leading (if not leading) financial newspapers, for 20 some years. As such he is qualified to present his views both from the perspectives of his strong knowledge of financial markets as well as his very eloquent skills as a writer. It should be stressed, however, that the intended audience for this book is not professional in nature (i.e., academics, financial experts, etc.) but the layman. As such it is simply written and the views presented are not very complex or beyond what those working in the field would not be expected to know.
Authers posits that there have been a number of factors that have made financial markets more volatile since the late 1990s until today (as opposed to the end of World War 2 until the late 1980s). The most important of these have been greater accumulation of financial resources into the hands of "financial professionals (i.e., fund... read more
Use coupon below to get discount at eCampus.com!
SHADES
$3 off textbook orders over $75
SUNBLOCK
$4 off textbook orders over $90
SUNSHINE
$5 off textbook orders over $100
Copy the coupon code before clicking the button!
| AVAILABILITY | |||
| Merchant | Format | Price | |
| Amazon US | Paperback | $9.29 - $24.99 | |
| eBooks.com | Digital (PDF) | $24.99 | |
| eCampus | Paperback | ||

500 Key Words for the SAT uses pictures and stories to help you remember the meanings of five hundred of the vocabulary words that appear most frequently on the SAT. Learning is fast, fun, and ...
The Messier's catalog of 109 'non-stellar' objects is still used by amateur astronomers as a guide to interesting objects to view and image. In 1995 the notable English astronomer and broadcaster Sir ...
AFTER THE DIAGNOSIS: HOW PATIENTS REACT AND HOW TO HELP THEM COPE provides readers with practical, realistic guidelines that help patients harness both emotional and rational strengths as they ...
Attention Authors, Speakers and Coaches:Does your homepage support your business goals or does it work against them? Home Sweet Home Page shares with you the 5 Deadly Mistakes you might be making on ...
Predictable Surprises: The Disasters You Should Have Seen Coming, and How to Prevent Them
Wildflowers: How to Identify Flowers in the Wild and How to Grow Them in Your Garden
Features a comprehensive guide to the many varieties of onion, leek, garlic, shallot, scallion and chive, with advice on cooking techniques.
The Cook's Complete Guide to Spices: An Illustrated Directory to Spices from Around the World and How to Use Them in the Kitchen, with 700 Photographs
Somewhere, somebody is having more fun than you are.Orso everyone believes. Peter Sagal, a mild-mannered, Harvard-educated radio host—the man who puts the second "l" in ...
"What makes this book so important is that it reflects the experiences of two of the industry's most experienced hands at getting real-world engineers to understand just what they're being asked ...