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Books > Money & Finance > Investment & securities > General
You have great investment ideas. If you turn them into highly
profitable portfolios, this book is for you. Advanced Portfolio
Management: A Quant's Guide for Fundamental Investors is for
fundamental equity analysts and portfolio managers, present, and
future. Whatever stage you are at in your career, you have valuable
investment ideas but always need knowledge to turn them into money.
This book will introduce you to a framework for portfolio
construction and risk management that is grounded in sound theory
and tested by successful fundamental portfolio managers. The
emphasis is on theory relevant to fundamental portfolio managers
that works in practice, enabling you to convert ideas into a
strategy portfolio that is both profitable and resilient. Intuition
always comes first, and this book helps to lay out simple but
effective "rules of thumb" that require little effort to implement
and understand. At the same time, the book shows how to implement
sophisticated techniques in order to meet the challenges a
successful investor faces as his or her strategy grows in size and
complexity. Advanced Portfolio Management also contains more
advanced material and a quantitative appendix, which benefit
quantitative researchers who are members of fundamental teams. You
will learn how to: Separate stock-specific return drivers from the
investment environment's return drivers Understand current
investment themes Size your cash positions based on Your investment
ideas Understand your performance Measure and decompose risk Hedge
the risk you don't want Use diversification to your advantage
Manage losses and control tail risk Set your leverage Author
Giuseppe A. Paleologo has consulted, collaborated, taught, and
drank strong wine with some of the best stock-pickers in the world;
he has traded tens of billions of dollars hedging and optimizing
their books and has helped them navigate through big drawdowns and
even bigger recoveries. Whether or not you have access to risk
models or advanced mathematical background, you will benefit from
the techniques and the insights contained in the book--and won't
find them covered anywhere else.
The irreverent guide to investing, Boglehead style The Boglehead's
Guide to Investing is a DIY handbook that espouses the sage
investment wisdom of John C. Bogle. This witty and wonderful book
offers contrarian advice that provides the first step on the road
to investment success, illustrating how relying on typical "common
sense" promoted by Wall Street is destined to leave you poorer.
This updated edition includes new information on backdoor Roth IRAs
and ETFs as mainstream buy and hold investments, estate taxes and
gifting, plus changes to the laws regarding Traditional and Roth
IRAs, and 401k and 403b retirement plans. With warnings and
principles both precisely accurate and grandly counterintuitive,
the Boglehead authors show how beating the market is a zero-sum
game. Investing can be simple, but it's certainly not simplistic.
Over the course of twenty years, the followers of John C. Bogle
have evolved from a loose association of investors to a major force
with the largest and most active non-commercial financial forum on
the Internet. The Boglehead's Guide to Investing brings that
communication to you with comprehensive guidance to the investment
prowess on display at Bogleheads.org. You'll learn how to craft
your own investment strategy using the Bogle-proven methods that
have worked for thousands of investors, and how to: Choose a sound
financial lifestyle and diversify your portfolio Start early,
invest regularly, and know what you're buying Preserve your buying
power, keeping costs and taxes low Throw out the "good" advice
promoted by Wall Street that leads to investment failure Financial
markets are essentially closed systems in which one's gain garners
another's loss. Investors looking for a roadmap to successfully
navigating these choppy waters long-term will find expert guidance,
sound advice, and a little irreverent humor in The Boglehead's
Guide to Investing.
The rapid advancement in encryption and network computing gave
birth to new tools and products that have influenced the local and
global economy alike. One recent and notable example is the
emergence of virtual currencies, also known as cryptocurrencies or
digital currencies. Virtual currencies, such as Bitcoin, introduced
a fundamental transformation that affected the way goods, services,
and assets are exchanged. Virtual currencies are experiencing an
increasing popularity in the financial markets and in portfolio
management as can be classified as financial asset or commodities
on a scale from pure medium of exchange advantages to pure store of
value advantages. As a result of its distributed ledgers based on
blockchain, cryptocurrencies offer some unique advantages to the
economy, investors, and consumers, but also pose considerable risks
to users and challenges for regulators when fitting the new
technology into the old legal framework. Bitcoin for example may be
useful in risk management and ideal for risk-averse investors in
anticipation of negative shocks to the market. The core objective
of this proposed book is to provide a comprehensive discussion on
the important issues related to cryptocurrencies ranging from
pricing, financial, legal to technological aspects.
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.
Shareholder engagement with publicly listed companies is often seen
as a key means to monitor corporate performance and behavior. In
this book, the authors examine the corporate governance roles of
key institutional investors in UK corporate equity, including
pension funds, insurance companies, collective investment funds,
hedge and private equity funds and sovereign wealth funds. The
authors argue that institutions' corporate governance roles are an
instrument ultimately shaped by private interests and market
forces, as well as law and regulatory obligations, and that
policy-makers should not readily make assumptions regarding their
effectiveness, or their alignment with public interest or social
good. They critically discuss the possibilities and limitations of
shareholder stewardship i.e. the UK Stewardship Code and the EU
Shareholder Rights Directive 2017 as well as explore various
reforms of the UK pension fund structures, including the Local
Government Pension Funds reform, the move from defined benefit to
defined contribution schemes and implications for funds' asset
allocation, investment management and corporate governance roles.
This book will be of interest to academics in corporate law and
governance as well as those in the corporate governance industry,
such as institutions, trade associations, proxy advisors and other
corporate governance service providers. Think tanks and research
institutes tied to institutional investment, corporate governance,
law and business may also be a key audience.
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.
This book teaches the basics of fixed-income securities in a way
that, unlike competitive texts, requires a minimum of
prerequisites. While other books focus heavily on institutional
details of the bond market, all of which could easily be learned
"on the job," Jarrow is more concerned with presenting a coherent
theoretical framework for understanding all basic models. His
unified approach-the Heath Jarrow Morton model-under which all
other models are presented as special cases, enhances understanding
while avoiding repetition. The author's pricing model is widely
used in today's securities industry. In this revised edition, the
author has added new chapters to enrich coverage, and has modified
the order of chapters slightly to smooth the progression of
material from simple to complex. Online material will be available
with the text, replacing the diskette included in the first
edition; lecture notes for instructors will be available on
PowerPoint slides. MathWorks has provided a free online, limited
version of the MATLAB's financial derivatives toolbox, with which
users of the book can apply the theory presented in each chapter.
This book focuses on one of the most important features of the
contemporary Japanese economy; cross shareholding - or mutual
shareholding - between corporations. The book analyses recent
trends and the reasons behind these, and discusses the implications
for the entire Japanese economic system and highlights relevant
public policy. Mitsuaki Okabe proposes that the dissolution of
cross shareholdings has weakened the importance of long-term
transactional relationships as seen in the Keiretsu (the 'main
bank') practice and employment, and that as a result the character
of the economy is now closer to that of the Anglo-American system.
Cross Shareholdings in Japan is a timely book and will be of
special interest to academics and researchers of economics, Asian
studies and finance, as well as policymakers and those involved
either directly or indirectly in the Japanese financial system.
The First Book from n+1--an Essential Chronicle of Our Financial
Crisis
HFM: Where are you going to buy protection on the U.S.
government's credit? I mean, if the U.S. defaults, what bank is
going to be able to make good on that contract? Who are you going
to buy that contract from, the Martians?
n+1: When does this begin to feel like less of a cyclical thing,
like the weather, and more of a permanent, end-of-the-world kind of
thing?
HFM: When you see me selling apples out on the street, that's
when you should go stock up on guns and ammunition.
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