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Books > Business & Economics > Finance & accounting
The long-awaited revised edition of the stock trading classic gets
you fully up to date on value investing, ESG investing, and other
important developments The definitive guide to stock trading,
Stocks for the Long Run has been providing the knowledge, insights,
and tools that traders need to beat the market for nearly 30 years.
This new edition brings you fully up to date on everything you need
to know to draw steady profits for yourself or your clients. It's
been updated with new chapters and content on: * The role of value
investing * The impact of
ESG-Environmental/Social/Governance-issues on the future of
investing * The current interest rate environment * Future returns
investors should expect in the bond and stock markets * The role of
international investing * The long-run risks on equity markets *
The role of black swan events, such as a pandemic You'll also get
in-depth discussions on the big questions investors face: Are we
seeing the eclipse of capitalism? What do global changes like
climate change mean for markets worldwide? Stocks for the Long Run
is essential reading for every investor and advisor who wants to
fully understand the market, including its behavior, past trends,
and future influences-in order to develop a prosperous long-term
portfolio that's both safe and secure.
Consumers continue to rely heavily on their phones to complete such
tasks as transferring funds between banks or accounts, depositing
or withdrawing funds, paying bills, and purchasing items. Mobile
money users are oftentimes more financially resilient and can
protect themselves better against economic and other shocks.
Moreover, mobile money can increase the velocity of money in
circulation because it reduces the transactions and time costs of
making retail payments. As such, understanding the impact of mobile
payments is imperative for businesses and the economy. Impact of
Mobile Payment Applications and Transfers on Business is a pivotal
reference source that provides vital research on mobile money
transfer and its impact in social, corporate, and micro- and
macro-policies concerning the aggregate economy and individual
households as a whole within an economy. It covers the impact,
innovations, business-to-business transformations, regulatory
framework, challenges, and ethical issues surrounding mobile money
transfers around the world. This book is ideally designed for
economists, financial analysts, business managers, leaders,
scholars, practitioners, researchers, and students in fields that
include management, finance, economics, commerce, and leadership.
The themes covered in Resilience and Transformation for Global
Restructuring will include Technology, Creativity and Innovation,
Post COVID-19 opportunities and challenges, Development for a
Sustainable World, Cross-Cultural Dimensions of well-being, Gender
Inequality, and Intersectionality. This Edited Collection draws
from selected papers from the 2022 International Conference on
Resilience and Transformation for Global Restructuring, which
addresses many of the challenges in a post-pandemic world.
Who holds the power in financial markets? For many, the answer
would probably be the large investment banks, big asset managers,
and hedge funds that are often in the media's spotlight. But more
and more a new group of sovereign investors, which includes some of
the world's largest sovereign wealth funds, government pension
funds, central bank reserve funds, state-owned enterprises, and
other sovereign capital-enabled entities, have emerged to become
the most influential capital markets players and investment firms,
with $30 trillion in assets under management ("super asset
owners"). Their ample resources, preference for lower profile,
passive investing, their long-time horizon and adherence to
sustainability as well as their need to diversify globally and by
sector have helped to transform the investment world and, in
particular, private markets for digital companies. They have helped
create and sustain an environment that has fostered the rise of the
likes of Uber, Alibaba, Spotify and other transformative players in
the digital economy, while providing their founders and business
models the benefit of long-term capital. Despite this increasingly
important impact, sovereign investors remain mostly unknown, often
maintaining a low profile in global markets. For the same reason,
they're also among the most widely misunderstood, as many view
investments made by sovereign investors as purely driven by
political aims. The general perception is that most sovereign
investors lack transparency and have questionable governance
controls, causing an investee nation to fear exposure to risks of
unfair competition, data security, corruption, and non-financially
or non-economically motivated investments. The current global
tensions around the AI race and tech competition - and now the
corona virus pandemic - have exacerbated such misperceptions,
spawning controversies around sovereign investors and capital
markets, governments, new technologies, cross-border investments,
and related laws and regulations. As such, sovereign capital and
the global digital economy are undergoing an unprecedented,
contentious moment. In short, the emergence of sovereign funds
symbolizes a major shift of the world's economic power. For the
first time, investment funds from developing countries are playing
with OECD financial giants as equals. Furthermore, their
investments into high tech enable them to participate at the
cutting-edge of the fourth industrial revolution, challenging
traditional innovation powerhouses like the US and Germany. For all
stakeholders, from tech unicorns, VC funds, asset managers,
financial firms, to policymakers, law firms, academics, and the
general public, this is the must-have book to get to know these new
venture capitalists and "super asset owners".
Anyone trying to understand finance has to contend with the
evolving and dynamic nature of the topic. Changes in economic
conditions, regulations, technology, competition, globalization,
and other factors regularly impact the development of the field,
but certain essential concepts remain key to a good understanding.
This book provides insights about the most important concepts in
finance. Drawing from a broad background in finance, Benton Gup has
brought together sixteen chapters written by leading academics and
professionals to deal with topics including Bitcoin, cyber
security, banking, corporate governance, state vs. private
ownership, pension plans, interest rates, multi-asset investing,
real estate, US and Islamic banking, and other issues that have a
direct impact on the field, its practitioners and scholars trying
to make sense of it. This book covers timely issues in a way that
academics, regulators, investors, and bankers will find relevant
and useable. Contributors include: P. Agrrawal, S. Aliyu, J.R.
Barth, J. Brodmann, R.P. DeGennaro, G.P. Dwyer, B. Faulk, W. Faulk,
M.J. Flannery, M.B. Frye, T.J. Gallagher, S.B. Guernsey, B.E. Gup,
M.K. Hassan, M.A. Hines, J.S. Jahera, Jr., K.N. Johnson, S. Joo, T.
Lutton, M.B. McDonald, W.L. Megginson, S.L. Schwarcz
Foreign Direct Investment and the Chinese Economy provides a
comprehensive overview of the impact of foreign direct investment,
with extensive empirical evidence, on the Chinese economy over the
last three and a half decades. Chunlai Chen presents a compelling
and thorough analysis of the leading theoretical explanations of
the impact of FDI through a series of rigorous and in-depth
empirical investigations on China's regional economic growth,
urban-rural income inequality and urbanization development. These
case studies show that despite FDI's contribution to economic
growth, reduction of income inequality and the rise in
urbanization, there is further evidence of uneven regional
distribution of FDI inflow. This has negatively affected economic
growth, exacerbated income inequality and impeded urbanization of
inland China. The book concludes by demonstrating that these
findings have important policy implications, not only for China,
but also for other developing countries influenced by the
implementation of FDI policies. This work of highly focused
theoretical analysis is an invaluable resource for scholars and
students of economics as well as policy-makers who are interested
in the Chinese economy.
How have the most influential political economists of the past
three centuries theorized about sovereign borrowing and shaped its
now widespread use? This important question receives a
comprehensive answer in this original work, featuring careful
textual analysis and illuminating exhibits of public debt empirics
since 1700. Beyond its value as a definitive, authoritative history
of thought on public debt, this book rehabilitates and reintroduces
a realist perspective into a contemporary debate now heavily
dominated by pessimists and optimists alike. The book
simultaneously explicates and critiques the most prominent theories
concerning why states borrow in the first place, whether or not
they borrow productively, the incidence of their debts, why they
sometimes borrow too much and why they often default, whether
explicitly or implicitly. The author classifies major public debt
theorists as pessimists, optimists or realists. This book also
examines the influence of regime types, especially why most modern
welfare states tend not only to over-issue bonds but also to incur
even larger implicit obligations via unfunded, off-balance sheet
liabilities. Scholars and undergraduate and graduate students in
economics and political science, as well as policymakers, will find
this analysis of public debt and public spending insightful and
revealing.
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