| The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash |
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The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash
This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Binding: PaperbackDewey Decimal Number: 332 EAN: 9781586486914 Edition: Revised edition ISBN: 1586486918 Label: PublicAffairs Manufacturer: PublicAffairs Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 240 Publication Date: February 09, 2009 Publisher: PublicAffairs Release Date: February 09, 2009 Studio: PublicAffairs Related Items:
Browse for similar items by category: Click to Display Editorial Review: Product Description: Previously published as The Trillion Dollar Meltdown Now fully updated with the latest financial developments, this is the bestselling book that briefly and brilliantly explains how we got into the economic mess that is the Credit Crunch. With the housing markets unravelling daily and distress signals flying throughout the rest of the economy, there is little doubt that we are facing a fierce recession. In crisp, gripping prose, Charles R. Morris shows how got into this mess. He explains the arcane financial instruments, the chicanery, the policy misjudgments, the dogmas, and the delusions that created the greatest credit bubble in world history. Paul Volcker slew the inflation dragon in the early 1980s, and set the stage for the high performance economy of the 1980s and 1990s. But Wall Street's prosperity soon tilted into gross excess. The astronomical leverage at major banks and their hedge fund and private equity clients led to massive disruption in global markets. A quarter century of free-market zealotry that extolled asset stripping, abusive lending, and hedge fund secrecy will go down in flames with it. Continued denial and concealment could cause the crisis to stretch out for years, but financial and government leaders are still downplaying the problem. The required restructuring will be at least as painful as the very difficult period of 1979-1983. The Two Trillion-Dollar Meltdown, updated to include the latest financial developments, is indispensable to understanding how the world economy has been put on the brink. Average Rating: ![]() Rating: - The Nuts and Bolts of Financial CrisisThis book explains the events caused the financial crisis. I attended a Harvard Business School session recently and clearly my understanding of the crisis - thanks to this book - was much better than the professor doing the session. Given the fact that the book was first published in early 2008, it was right on dot with its predictions - though somewhat on the lower side. The author is writing a newer edition - the Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown. The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, ... Read More Rating: - Simple. lucid explanation of how things got so badIn this short, lucid book, Morris explains just exactly what wrong with Wall Street in recent years. He makes an extraordinarily complex story very easy to understand. The basic story is that we just went through a massive credit bubble, in which Wall Street created vastly more credit than the world has ever seen before. The detailed story are all of the different ways which Wall Street achieved this feat. Basically, Wall Street was very creative in using new mathematics and computer models to create ... Read More Rating: - a worthwhile readThis book does a very nice job of explaining in a concise manner the origins of the credit crisis. To be honest it is not entirely complete as it misses one of the critical ways by which many ibanks and hedge fund managers levered their books. Having said that, it is a quick and worthwhile read that may illuminate some aspects of the debacle you may not have considered. Rating: - Intresting bookThis book defines how greed, political influence, idiotic schemes devised by various and sundry financial "experts" composed of bankers, politicos, hedge fund gurus and many others in the spectrum of the investment business ultimately bilked their investors and finally the U.S. taxpayer out of trillions of dollars. Unfortunately, some of these nuts, with their deregulation mantra, that got us into this mess and made wheelbarrows of money while doing it, are the ones who are supposed to guide us out. ... Read More Rating: - No Insight!I was attracted to the book by the catchy title. After I rushed through it, I was bewildered why the book was writted and published at all: it was a hodgepodge of recycled news clips and published opinions in the firnacial journals. There was no in-depth analysis nor insights regarding fundamental flaws of the global financial system that led us to this misery. For those who wish to understand the current financial turmoil, I think you'll be better served by reading books such as "The New Paradigm for Financial ... Read More |
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