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Books > Money & Finance > Investment & securities > General
Learn how to evaluate any investment fund before deciding where to
place your money so you can ensure you generate more wealth and
protect your cash. This valuable guide will help you make the right
investment decisions by: - Explaining the procedures that should be
followed before investing money anywhere. - Helping you cut through
marketing language to get a real sense of how risky a company's
strategy may be. - Showing you what questions to ask of investment
fund managers so you're more comfortable investing in a company. -
Showing you how to recognise the warning signs of risky
investments. This book will also help you identify companies who
consistently deliver high returns, thereby allowing you to generate
more wealth by investing in successful, and stable, funds.
An introduction to the fast growing $1.5 billion foreign
exchange trading marketplace, showing you how the markets work, how
to trade them successfully and how to mitigate risk.
"The Financial Times Guide to Foreign Exchange Trading"is the
authoritative primer, the first port of call for anyone interested
in foreign exchange trading and wants to know what it is all about
before taking the plunge.
Want to invest in gold and silver, but aren't sure how? How to
Invest in Gold and Silver is a practical guide for investors who
are new to the emerging gold and silver markets. Written in clear
layman's terms, this forward-thinking book is packed with
information to help gold and silver investors navigate an exciting,
timely and largely unexplored market. How to Invest in Gold and
Silver includes: An overview that explains the wisdom of gold and
silver investments in today's economic environment. Indispensible
information on how to manage the risk of gold and silver assets. A
step-by-step strategy to investing in bullion and coins. Clear
explanations on using ETFs (Electronic Trading Funds) and options.
The pros and cons of investing in major, mid-tier and junior mining
companies - and a how-to methodology for making informed choices
for the best gains. In his pioneering work, author Don Durrett
shares the details of his own systematic, successful approach to
investing in gold and silver. This easy to follow book shows
investors how to take advantage of the rising prices of precious
metals using a balanced portfolio of gold and silver assets. Armed
with this knowledge you will be able to invest with confidence.
Private equity is more economically significant than ever, as
institutions hunt for high returns in a risky world. Private Equity
4.0 examines the role, workings and contribution of this important
industry in a straightforward yet revealing manner. Dr. Josh Lerner
Jacob H. Schiff Professor of Investment Banking Chair,
Entrepreneurial Management Unit Harvard Business School A
multi-perspective look at private equity's inner workings Private
Equity 4.0 provides an insider perspective on the private equity
industry, and analyzes the fundamental evolution of the private
equity asset class over the past 30 years, from alternative to
mainstream. The book provides insightful interviews of key industry
figures, and case studies of some of the success stories in the
industry. It also answers key questions related to strategy, fund
manager selection, incentive mechanisms, performance comparison,
red flags in prospectuses, and more. Private Equity 4.0 offers
guidance for the many stakeholders that could benefit from a more
complete understanding of this special area of finance. *
Understand the industry's dominant business models * Discover how
value is created and performance measured * Perform a deep dive
into the ecosystem of professionals that make the industry hum,
including the different incentive systems that support the
industry's players * Elaborate a clear set of guidelines to invest
in the industry and deliver better performance Written by a team of
authors that combine academic and industry expertise to produce a
well-rounded perspective, this book details the inner workings of
private equity and gives readers the background they need to feel
confident about committing to this asset class. Coverage includes a
historical perspective on the business models of the three major
waves of private equity leading to today's 4.0 model, a detailed
analysis of the industry today, as well as reflections on the
future of private equity and prospective futures. It also provides
readers with the analytical and financial tools to analyze a fund's
performance, with clear explanations of the mechanisms,
organizations, and individuals that make the system work. The
authors demystify private equity by providing a balanced, but
critical, review of its contributions and shortcomings and moving
beyond the simplistic journalistic descriptions. Its ecosystem is
complex and not recognizing that complexity leads to inappropriate
judgments. Because of its assumed opacity and some historical
deviant (and generally transient) practices, it has often been
accused of evil intents, making it an ideal scapegoat in times of
economic crisis, prodding leading politicians and regulators to
intervene and demand changes in practices. Unfortunately, such
actors were often responding to public calls for action rather than
a thorough understanding of the factors at play in this complex
interdependent system, doing often more harm than good in the
process and depriving economies of one of their most dynamic and
creative forces. Self-regulation has clearly shown its limits, but
righteous political interventions even more so. Private equity
investment can be a valuable addition to many portfolios, but
investors need a clear understanding of the forces at work before
committing to this asset class. With detailed explanations and
expert insights, Private Equity 4.0 is a comprehensive guide to the
industry ways and means that enables the reader to capture its
richness and sustainability.
The second edition of "An Introduction to Credit Derivatives"
provides a broad introduction to products and a marketplace that
have changed significantly since the financial crisis of 2008.
Author Moorad Choudhry gives a practitioner's perspective on credit
derivative instruments and the risks they involve in a succinct
style without sacrificing technical details and scientific
precision.
Beginning with foundational discussions of credit risk, credit
risk transfer and credit ratings, the book proceeds to examine
credit default swaps and related pricing, asset swaps,
credit-linked notes, and more. Ample references, appendices and a
glossary add considerably to the lasting value of the book for
students and professionals in finance.
A post-crisis guide to a powerful bank risk management product, its
history and its useLiberal use of Bloomberg screens and new worked
examples increase hands-on practicalityNew online set of CDS
pricing models and other worksheets multiply the book's uses
Sovereign Investment: Concerns and Policy Reactions provides the
first major holistic examination and interdisciplinary analysis of
sovereign wealth funds. Sovereign wealth funds currently hold three
trillion dollars' worth of investments, almost twice the amount in
all the hedge funds worldwide, and are predicted to hold nine
trillion more by 2015.
This relatively new and rapidly expanding phenomenon remains
relatively unregulated, but the International Monetary Fund and the
G7 aim to establish temporary and voluntary rules to introduce
transparency and uniformity until more permanent regulatory
structures are instituted. What permanent rules and procedures
should govern sovereign wealth funds? What bodies should enforce
them? Do the current provisional rules answer the national security
concerns of host countries? Editors Karl P. Sauvant, Lisa Sachs,
and Wouter P.F. Schmit Jongbloed address these questions in a
collection of essays by leading authorities from the IMF, academic
institutions, law firms, multi-national corporations, and think
tanks. Together, these authors analyze how sovereign wealth funds
have helped to limit the effects of the current global economic
crisis, and what rules can govern their operation in the future.
Lombard Street is Walter Bagehot's famous explanation of the
England central banking system established during the 19th century.
At the time Bagehot wrote, the United Kingdom was at the peak of
its influence. The Bank of England in London, was one of the most
powerful institutions in the world. Working as an economist at the
time, Walter Bagehot sets about explaining how the British
government and the Bank of England interact. Leading on from this,
he explains how the Bank of England and other banks - the
Joint-Stock and Private banking companies - do the business of
finance. Bagehot is not afraid to admit that life at the bank is
usually quite boring, albeit punctuated by short periods of sudden
excitement. The sudden boom of a market, or sudden fluctuations in
the credit system, can create an excited demand for money. The
eruption of an economic depression, which Bagehot aptly notes is
rapidly contagious around different sectors of the economy, can
also make working in the bank a lot less tedious.
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