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Books > Business & Economics > Finance & accounting
One of the integral parts of determining business success directly
correlates to how well a company interacts with their customers.
This increased demand for direct communication has evolved how
companies cooperate with their patrons and examines how essential
ethics is related to these communications. Ethical Consumerism and
Comparative Studies Across Different Cultures: Emerging Research
and Opportunities provides emerging research exploring the
theoretical and practical aspects of the fundamental issues related
to ethical consumerism and applications within business, science,
engineering, and technology and examines the impact Arab and global
cultures have on consumerism. Featuring coverage on a broad range
of topics such as business ethics, data management, and global
business, this book is ideally designed for managers, executives,
advertisers, marketers, sales directors, practitioners,
researchers, academicians, and students.
This book covers three topics that have dominated financial market
regulation and supervision debates: digital finance, sustainable
finance, and the Banking and Capital Markets Union. Within the
first part, seven chapters will tackle specific questions arising
in digital finance, including but not limited to artificial
intelligence, tokenisation, and international regulatory
cooperation in digital financial services. The second part
addresses one of humanity's most pressing issues today: the climate
crisis. The quest for sustainable finance is driven by political
actors and a common understanding that climate change is a severe
threat. As financial institutions are a cornerstone of human
interaction, they are in the regulatory spotlight. The chapters
explore sustainability in EU banking and insurance regulation, the
interrelationship between systemic risk and sustainability, and the
'greening' of EU monetary policy. The third part analyses two
projects that have led to huge structural changes in the European
financial market architecture over the last decade: the European
Banking Union and Capital Markets Union. This transformation has
raised numerous legal questions that can only gradually be answered
in all their intricacies. In four chapters, this book examines
composite procedures, property rights of depositors in banking
resolution, preemptive financing arrangements and the phenomenon of
subsidiarisation in the context of Brexit. Of interest to
academics, policymakers, practitioners, and students in the field
of EU financial regulation, banking law, securities law, and
regulatory law, this book offers a compilation of analyses on
pressing banking and capital markets law problems.
In Progress and Poverty, economist Henry George scrutinizes the
connection between population growth and distribution of wealth in
the economy of the late nineteenth century. The initial portions of
the book are occupied with refuting the demographic theories of
Thomas Malthus, who asserted that the vast abundance of goods
generated by an economy's growth was spent on food. Consequently
the population rises, keeping living standards low, poverty
widespread, and starvation and disease common. Henry George had a
different attitude: that poverty could be solved and economic
progress preserved. To prove this, he draws upon decades of data
which show that the increase in land prices restrains the amount of
production on said land; business owners thus have less to pay
their workers, with the result being mass poverty especially within
cities.
This book brings together the latest concepts and models in
real-estate derivatives, the new frontier in financial markets. The
importance of real-estate derivatives in managing property price
risk that has destabilized economies frequently over the last
hundred years has been brought into the limelight by Robert
Shiller. In spite of his masterful campaign for the introduction of
real-estate derivatives, these financial instruments are still in a
state of infancy. This book aims to provide a state-of-the-art
overview of real-estate derivatives, covering the description of
these financial products, their applications, and the most
important models proposed in the literature. In order to facilitate
a better understanding of the situations when these products can be
successfully used, ancillary topics such as real-estate indices,
mortgages, securitization, and equity release mortgages are also
discussed. The book examines econometric aspects of real-estate
index prices time series and financial engineering non-arbitrage
principles governing the pricing of derivatives. The emphasis is on
understanding the financial instruments through their mechanics and
comparative description. The examples are based on real-world data
from exchanges or from major investment banks or financial houses
in London. The numerical analysis is easily replicable with Excel
and Matlab.
Acclaim for Joel Greenblatt's New York Times bestseller THE LITTLE
BOOK THAT BEATS THE MARKET "One of the best, clearest guides to
value investing out there." Wall Street Journal "Simply perfect.
One of the most important investment books of the last fifty
years!" Michael Price "A landmark book-a stunningly simple and
low-risk way to significantly beat the market!" Michael Steinhardt,
the dean of Wall Street hedge-fund managers "The best book on the
subject in years." Financial Times "The best thing about this
book-from which I intend to steal liberally for the next edition of
The Only Investment Guide You'll Ever Need-is that most people
won't believe it...That's good, because the more people who know
about a good thing, the more expensive that thing ordinarily
becomes..." Andrew Tobias, author of The Only Investment Guide
You'll Ever Need "This book is the finest simple distillation of
modern value investing principles ever written. It should be
mandatory reading for all serious investors from the fourth grade
on up." Professor Bruce Greenwald, director of the Heilbrunn Center
for Graham and Dodd Investing, Columbia Business School
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