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Books > Money & Finance > Investment & securities > General
Why do so many smart professional people make bad investments? Why
do they often fail to accumulate significant wealth and sometimes
make truly disastrous financial decisions? This book offers some
answers to these questions. It then provides specific
recommendations to help doctors, lawyers, scientists, teachers, and
many other intelligent people avoid serious financial errors and
achieve superior investment results. Sensible self-directed
investing with long-term compounding of returns and avoidance of
all unnecessary fees can produce remarkable accumulations of
capital with limited risk. You can choose to be successful as a
largely passive investor or as one more seriously involved in
making individual investment decisions. This book tells you how to
do it. Buying this short volume and then putting its advice into
practice may become the most important financial decisions you have
ever made. About the author - Joseph D. Schulman is an
internationally known physician, medical research scientist, and
biomedical entrepreneur. He is also a successful investor. Dr.
Schulman is a graduate of Harvard Medical School and of the
Executive M.B.A. (OPM) program at Harvard Business School. He lives
with his wife, Dixie, in Oxford, MD and Palm Springs, CA.
In most capital markets, insider trading is the most common
violation of securities law. It is also the most well known,
inspiring countless movie plots and attracting scholars with a
broad range of backgrounds and interests, from pure legal doctrine
to empirical analysis to complex economic theory. This volume
brings together original cutting-edge research in these and other
areas written by leading experts in insider trading law and
economics. The Handbook begins with a section devoted to legal
issues surrounding the US's ban on insider trading, which is one of
the oldest and most energetically enforced in the world. Using this
section as a foundation, contributors go on to discuss several
specific court cases as well as important developments in empirical
research on the subject. The Handbook concludes with a section
devoted to international perspectives, providing insight into
insider trading laws in China, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, the
United Kingdom and the European Union. This timely and
comprehensive volume will appeal to students and professors of law
and economics, as well as scholars, researchers and practitioners
with an interest in insider trading. Contributors: K. Alexander,
S.M. Bainbridge, L.N. Beny, S.F. Diamond, J. Fisch, J.M. Heminway,
M.T. Henderson, N.C. Howson, H. Huang, K. Kendall, S.H. Kim, T.A.
Lambert, K. Langenbucher, D.C. Langevoort, H.G. Manne, M. Nelemans,
A. Padilla, A.C. Pritchard, J.M. Ramseyer, M.C. Schouten, H.N.
Seyhun, A.F. Simpson, J.W. Verret, G. Walker
WHAT EVERY OPTION TRADER NEEDS TO KNOW. THE ONE BOOK EVERY TRADER
SHOULD OWN.The bestselling Option Volatility & Pricing has made
Sheldon Natenberg a widely recognized authority in the option
industry. At firms around the world, the text is often the first
book that new professional traders aregiven to learn the trading
strategies and risk management techniques required for success in
option markets. Now, in this revised, updated, and expanded second
edition, this thirty-year trading professional presents the most
comprehensive guide to advanced trading strategies and techniques
now in print. Covering a wide range of topics as diverse and
exciting as the marketitself, this text enables both new and
experiencedtraders to delve in detail into the many aspects of
option markets, including: The foundations of option theoryDynamic
hedgingVolatility and directional trading strategiesRisk
analysisPosition managementStock index futures and
optionsVolatility contracts Clear, concise, and comprehensive, the
second edition of Option Volatility & Pricing is sure to be an
important addition to every option trader's library--as invaluable
as Natenberg's acclaimed seminars at the world'slargest derivatives
exchanges and trading firms. You'll learn how professional option
traders approach the market, including the trading strategies and
risk management techniques necessary for success. You'll gain
afuller understanding of how theoretical pricing models work. And,
best of all, you'll learn how to apply the principles of option
evaluation to create strategies that, given a trader's assessment
of market conditions and trends, have the greatest chance of
success. Option trading is both a science and an art. This book
shows how to apply both to maximum effect.
Whether you are rich or poor, famous or unpopular, loaded with
degrees or didn't even graduate from high school, anyone who wishes
to increase their financial productivity are in for a lucrative and
beneficial read as author Smart Investor releases, exclusively
through Xlibris, "How I Turned 300K into $3, 006, 282.57 After
Taxes in a Bear Market with Virtual Trading."
Although this educational book has been organized as a textbook or
supplemental resource for college or university instructors, anyone
may read this book on their own to gain vital knowledge and
practical information on how to make their investments profitable.
In addition to providing the latest tips for stock and options
trading in this current, worldwide economic meltdown, this book
tackles serious long-term issues such as: choosing the right
broker, making goals, margin usage, mutual fund risks, risk
management, portfolio management, and developing investment
strategies through safe and free virtual trading.
Along with the brilliant viewpoints, detailed lessons, and ten
investing basics, in his book, "How I Turned 300K into $3, 006,
282.57 After Taxes in a Bear Market with Virtual Trading," the
author still emphasizes hard work and discipline are essential
factors for anyone to succeed in this venture.
In the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis, the regulation of
the world's enormous derivatives markets assumed center stage on
the international public policy agenda. Critics argued that loose
regulation had contributed to the momentous crisis, but lasting
reform has been difficult to implement since. Despite the global
importance of derivatives markets, they remain mysterious and
obscure to many. In Governing the World's Biggest Market, Eric
Helleiner, Stefano Pagliari, and Irene Spagna have gathered an
international cast of contributors to rectify this relative
neglect. They examine how G20 governments have developed a
coordinated international agenda to enhance control over these
markets, which had been allowed to grow largely unchecked before
the crisis. In analyzing this reform agenda, they advance three
core arguments: first, the agenda to rein in these enormous markets
has many limitations; second, the reform process has been plagued
by delays, inconsistencies, and tensions that fragment the
governance of these markets; and third, the politics driving the
reforms have been extremely complicated. An authoritative overview
of how this vast system is governed, Governing the World's Biggest
Market looks at how the goals, limitations, and outcomes of
post-crisis initiatives to regulate these markets have been
influenced by a complex combination of transnational, inter-state,
and domestic political dynamics. Moreover, this volume emphasizes
how crucial regulatory reform is to stabilizing the global economy
long-term.
Now with the latest and safest strategies for smart investing in
the new economy
A perennial bestseller, Nancy Dunnan's "How to Invest
$50-$5,000" has been a trusted advisor for more than two decades.
But never before has the economy changed so radically in so short a
time. This new edition reflects the latest, smartest strategies for
small investing in the current economy, and has fully updated
information on all of the recent changes in federal regulations and
laws.
Covering the full range of small investing--from selecting a
bank to choosing specific investments to making sense of financial
pages--Dunnan guides even the most inexperienced investor through
the maze of stocks, bonds, treasuries, mutual funds, and more. Now
more than ever, "How to Invest $50-$5,000" is an indispensable
handbook for small investors--pointing the way toward the best
low-risk, high-value opportunities available in the current U.S.
economy.
Now it can be told! The secrets and insider knowledge of high
finance-as the industry stood in 1878-are all revealed here in this
curious and now entirely historical work of post-Civil War
financial journalism. Discover. . how the New York Stock Exchange
operated before the telephone! . what kept the "machinery of
speculation" greased . the scheming of 19th-century stockbrokers .
the "habits and humors" of the Street at the time . and more!
Foreign Direct Investment in Japan is the first serious and
comprehensive examination of why the direct participation of
foreign firms in the economy of Japan is lower than in any other
advanced industrial nation. An internationally acclaimed group of
scholars and practitioners addresses this problem and considers
what policy actions, if any, the Japanese government can take to
increase direct investment. Foreign exchange controls banned direct
investment into Japan until the late 1970s and this is still
partially responsible for the low penetration of foreign firms. A
fundamental question addressed by the book is whether or not
ownership advantages in technology and management know-how
possessed by foreign firms are strong enough to overcome the extra
costs of doing business in Japan. Such extra costs or locational
disadvantages include very high land and labour costs as well as
business practices unique to Japan, characterized by the long-term
customized transaction relationship among assemblers, component
suppliers, distributors and financial institutions and the
long-time employment system. Although the Government of Japan
desires to invite more foreign firms, this book demonstrates that
there are many areas where direct investment has been adversely
affected by internal regulation. Foreign Direct Investment in Japan
explores this participation of foreign firms in this economy from
the perspectives of economic theory, history, and the practical
experiences of non-Japanese firms that have attempted to do
business directly in Japan.
Industrial houses have, in recent years, begun to favor green
products and financial institutions are funneling investible funds
to environmentally friendly industries as a priority.
Implementation of green policy to support these changes requires
economic as well as political support from various influential
countries. Success of green policies will inevitably benefit
biodiversity and global environmental health. Economic and
Political Implications of Green Trading and Energy Use is a
scholarly research publication that presents global perspectives on
the impact of green financing and accounting on the health of the
environment while highlighting issues related to carbon trading,
carbon credit, energy use, and energy efficiency and their impact
on economic outputs. This reference features a range of topics
including environmental policies and sustainable development and is
essential for academicians, environmental scientists, policymakers,
political scientists, students, and researchers.
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