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Loading... A Demon of Our Own Design: Markets, Hedge Funds, and the Perils of…by Richard BookstaberLibraryThing recommendationsMember recommendationsLoading...
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Some good thoughts about risk management, but also a lot of pointless memoir-ish details... the book would have been better served with a focus on one or the other. ( )Today’s financial derivatives, designed to control risk, have only succeeded in intensifying it. The author, Richard Bookstaber, a Wall Street quant, makes a simple point. Although economic growth is more stable today than it has in the past 50 years, the markets have grown more volatile. A MIT-educated mathematician was lured out of academia to create complex financial instruments and computer models designed to limit risk. In his own words, he failed. Yet that does not lessen his insight. The author paints as poignant a picture of the 1987 Crash and Long Term Capital Management (LTCM) failure as I have read. In the latter case, he argues convincingly that LTCM demise began not with the Russian default, but with Sandy Weill’s decision to shutter the newly acquired U. S. fixed income arb desk of Solomon Brothers, As great as his historical analysis is, Bookstabler’s book appears to lose focus when stipulating solutions. The author admits it took him more than a decade to complete this book. That comes as no surprise. Complex situations defy Euclidian precision. His prescription of reduced complexity and coupling with less leverage seems, somehow, unlikely. Neo-classical economics with its efficient markets assumption does not jibe with today’s instantaneous distribution of copious amounts of information. Until human beings adapt, volatility promises to increase. Penned by the Pointed Pundit December 9, 2007 3:51:11 PM I'm adding to my review and upgrading my rating from 3 to 4 stars. The complexity that worried Bookstaber is, by common consensus, at the heart of the current credit crises. Give him high marks for his perspicacity. At the time his book was published, the Wall Street Journal noted that things had changed since the time of the "problems" Bookstaber wrote about, and they were extremely unlikely to occur again. And the Maginot Line award goes to: The Wall Street Journal! I still fault Bookstaber for his naiveté. But, I think Bookstaber the starting point for the ordinary person interested in the current problems plaguing the capital markets. I would encourage them to go on to [[Steinherr]] Derivatives: The Wild Beast of Finance]. Original Review: An interesting mix of Wall Street gossip and "I was there" insight. He thesis is that complexity and "tight coupling" (as to which see p. 154) make for disaster. His prescription is less leverage and simpler financial instruments has a naiveté not befitting a Wall Street veteran. The wheel, having ratcheted, cannot turn back. Much better, I think, is [[Steinherr]], [Derivatives: The Wild Beast of Finance]. It, unlike [A Demon of Our Own Design], has intellectual heft. As General Manager of the European Bank,[[Steinherr]], provides "I was there" treatment of financial calamities that are more important in the debate about the role of derivatives and questions about regulation. His coverage is much broader without losing focus. Indeed, one can ask, does the loss of Solomon Brothers or pre-merge UBS or any of the number of banking houses that have managed to do themselves in, really have any global (ontological) significance? To ask the question about [[Steinherr]]'s examples (Metallgesellschaft, Bankers Trust, Orange County) is to answer it: yes. no reviews | add a review
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Why do markets keep crashing and why are financial crises greater than ever before? As the risk manager to some of the leading firms on Wall Street–from Morgan Stanley to Salomon and Citigroup–and a member of some of the world’s largest hedge funds, from Moore Capital to Ziff Brothers and FrontPoint Partners, Rick Bookstaber has seen the ghost inside the machine and vividly shows us a world that is even riskier than we think. The very things done to make markets safer, have, in fact, created a world that is far more dangerous. From the 1987 crash to Citigroup closing the Salomon Arb unit, from staggering losses at UBS to the demise of Long-Term Capital Management, Bookstaber gives readers a front row seat to the management decisions made by some of the most powerful financial figures in the world that led to catastrophe, and describes the impact of his own activities on markets and market crashes. Much of the innovation of the last 30 years has wreaked havoc on the markets and cost trillions of dollars. A Demon of Our Own Design tells the story of man’s attempt to manage market risk and what it has wrought. In the process of showing what we have done, Bookstaber shines a light on what the future holds for a world where capital and power have moved from Wall Street institutions to elite and highly leveraged hedge funds.
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:57 -0400)
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