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Books > Money & Finance > Investment & securities
Make the most of your investment portfolio with a mix of assets
from stocks to real estate to cryptocurrency There's nothing more
satisfying than seeing the balance of a financial account grow
month over month. But before that can happen, you need to know the
best places to invest your money. Who can you trust for solid,
reliable investing advice? Investing All-in-One For Dummies offers
sound guidance for investors at every level. Whether you're stumped
by stocks, baffled by bonds, mystified about mutual funds, or
curious about cryptocurrency, this book gives you a solid
foundation in those investing concepts and many others. After
reading the expert advice and considering your risk tolerance and
timeline, you can confidently choose the best investments for your
financial goals. Containing advice from 10 different Dummies
investing guides, Investing All-in-One For Dummies shows you how
to: Set short- and long-term investing goals, invest to minimize
your tax hit, and develop an investing strategy using a mix of
investment vehicles Decide when to buy, hold, or sell an investment
Choose the right mix of stocks, bonds, and mutual funds to create a
diversified portfolio Identify real estate investment opportunities
and find the capital to make purchases Execute trades through an
online broker instead of using a traditional investment firm
Evaluate modern investing trends like cryptocurrency and
environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing For anyone
who wants to dip their toes into the markets or who tends to leave
their investment decisions in the hands of someone else, Investing
All-in-One For Dummies is the must-read resource when you're ready
to make informed decisions and pick solid investments for your
financial future.
This is Bernie Keating's sixth book after finishing other careers
spanning 60 years: Naval officer - Korean WarTeaching Assistant,
U.C., BerkeleyMulti-national company executive Management
consultantRancher in Sierra Mountains
'How many millionaires do you know who have become wealthy by
investing in savings accounts? I rest my case.' - Robert G. Allen,
investment advisor and author of Multiple Streams of Income In many
people's thinking, the financial markets are reserved only for the
wealthy or people with financial or economic backgrounds. They
discard the idea of becoming involved in trading because they
perceive it to be too difficult. But Ross Larter, author of How to
Make Money on the Stock Exchange, believes that the markets provide
opportunities for everyone to generate income. Learning the skills
of trading on the stock market can provide you with the opportunity
to generate an income well into your retirement years. To those who
have walked the journey for a while, the stock market becomes like
an all-you-can-eat buffet, providing opportunity on a daily basis
for individuals to make money for themselves and their families.
How to Make Money on the Stock Exchange is written for ordinary
people, in everyday language, to help them understand how the stock
market works, and how to use this knowledge to acquire the
necessary skills to generate a secondary (and potentially a
primary) income by investing and/or trading on the markets. You
don't need to be a financial whizz-kid to make money on the stock
market. All you have to do is be willing, and take the time, to
learn about it. This book will show you how.
In response to the Global Financial Crisis and the COVID-19
pandemic, central banks have used all available instruments in
their monetary policy tool-kit to avoid financial market
disruptions and a collapse in real economic activities. These
actions have expanded the size of their balance sheets and altered
the composition of the asset-side. This edited book highlights how
these assets are managed, providing an intellectual and practical
contribution to an under-researched field of central bank
responsibilities. It first reviews the sources and uses of domestic
and international assets and how they complement-or possibly
conflict with-the implementation of monetary policy goals. Next,
the book examines the asset management mandate in a balance sheet
context before turning to the investment decision-making process
from strategic and tactical asset allocation to investment
strategies, risk management, governance, reporting and control.
Finally, it presents new developments in the field of managing
assets at central banks. The individual chapters are written by
central bankers, academics, and representatives from International
Financial Institutions, each representing a particular aspect of
the asset management practice. Practical and powerful insights from
a hall of fame of investors, central bankers and scholars, are
packed into this one volume. If you could have only one book on
central bank asset management, this would be it. -Peter R. Fisher,
Clinical Professor, Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth Jacob
Bjorheim draws on his long experience in sovereign asset management
to pull together a rich collection of insights from a broad range
of expertise. Asset management at central banks has evolved and
expanded considerably over the past decade. This book is a timely
source of information and guidance. -Guy Debelle, Deputy Governor,
Reserve Bank of Australia Central bank balance sheets have grown at
a tremendous pace over the last decade and a half. Drawing on
contributions from scholars and experienced central bankers from
around the world, this timely and insightful book sheds light on
how central banks are, and should be, managing their growing
balance sheets. -Kjell G. Nyborg, Chaired Professor of Finance,
University of Zurich, Author of Collateral Frameworks: The Open
Secret of Central Banks Central banks and monetary authorities are
charged with, and being held accountable for, managing portfolios
of foreign currency assets of unprecedented size. The essays in
this admirable book, written by some of the worlds most highly
experienced officials, cover the full range of why and how this is
currently being done and how new developments are affecting old
practices. Interesting conceptually and immensely useful
practically. -William White, Senior Fellow at the C.D. Howe
Institute, former Head of the Monetary and Economic Department with
the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and chairman of the
Economic and Development Review Committee at the OECD An excellent
and timely review of modern international reserve management, which
ought to be read by everyone working with, or simply interested in,
international asset management and finance as well as monetary and
economic policy. The spectrum of authors is broad and their
combined insight is very valuable. -Tom A. Fearnley, Investment
Director, Norwegian Ministry of Finance With "Asset Management at
Central Banks and Monetary Authorities", Jacob Bjorheim has
achieved an editorial tour de force. The book assembles the
insightful views of the leading experts in the field, both from an
academic and practitioners' perspective. It bridges the gap between
the macroeconomics of central banks and the financial management of
their reserves. A must read to understand how central banks are
special in the group of institutional investors. -Eric Bouye, Head
of Asset Allocation and Quantitative Strategies, Treasury
Department, The World Bank The balance sheet is a large and
important toolbox for any central bank and specifically the foreign
exchange reserves constitute one the more powerful of these tools.
This book provides excellent insight in the various perspectives of
managing reserves at a central bank. -Heidi Elmer, Director of
Markets Department, Severiges Riksbank The world of international
reserves has changed since the global financial crisis. In this
volume, Jacob Bjorheim has assembled a stellar cast of experts to
explain how and what that means for reserves management. With
chapter authors like Andrew Ang, Jennifer Johnson-Calari, Robert
McCauley, Ravi Menon, Simon Potter and Philip Turner, it is a book
that every reserve manager must read. -Eli Remolona, Professor of
Finance and Director of Central Banking, Asia School of Business in
collaboration with MIT Sloan Jacob Bjorheim has succeeded in
bringing together a first-class team of experts, and organising
their contributions in an articulated journey from the central
banks' policy mandate to their asset management practices. An
indispensable post-crisis update of the subject and a a required
reading for anyone professionally involved with central bank's
asset management, or simply curious about a topic benefitting
otherwise from limited research. -Louis de Montpellier, Former
Global Head, Official Institutions Group, SSGA, and former Deputy
Head, Banking Department, Bank for International Settlements (BIS),
Basel At last, a book that shares with a wider audience, deep
insight in a unique, challenging and ethical approach of asset
management developed and implemented in the secretive world of
central banks. If you wonder how to manage funds that stand ready
for use at short notice in times of stress then this book is for
you. Two features make it such a valuable read and a must-have
reference: First, the very comprehensive list of themes covered
from a rich diversity of angles. Second, the very impressive list
of prominent institutions and authors that have contributed and
shared their analysis and practical approaches of the issues
presented. What is better than to get the information directly from
first-hand practitioners, experts and managers themselves in their
own words? -Jean-Pierre Matt, Former Head of Financial Analysis at
the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and founder of
Quanteis This book holds the promise to become the go-to guide for
anyone wishing to learn more about the management of official
foreign exchange reserves. Central bankers in particular, but also
those providing services to central banks, will find benefit from
the broad scope in subject matter and varied perspectives being
presented. I am yet to see a compendium on official reserve
management with similar reach in subject matter. -Leon Myburgh,
Former Head Financial Markets Department, South African Reserve
Bank (SARB), Pretoria This is an immensely timely book at a time
when central bank operations, and their balance sheets, remain
"larger for longer". Following the Financial Crisis 10 years ago,
and with the Covid-19 Recession about to break, central bank
balance sheets are at the forefront of the authorities' response to
economic issues as never before. Yet the management of their now
large-scale assets remains a little known and little studied area.
The authors of this book combine extensive technical and practical
experience, and their observations will fill an important gap in
the literature at a critical time. -Freyr Hermannsson, Former Head
of Treasury, Central Bank of Iceland, Reykjavik
Radical developments in financial management, spurred by
improvements in computer technology, have created demand for people
who can use modern financial techniques combined with computer
skills such as C++. Dr. Brooks gives readers the ability to express
derivative solutions in an attractive, user-friendly format, and
the ability to develop a permanent software package containing
them. His book explains in detail how to write C++ source code and
at the same time explains derivative valuation problems and
methods. Entry level as well as experienced financial professionals
have already found that the ability to understand and write C++
code has greatly enhanced their careers. This is an important
hands-on training resource for practitioners and a clearly
presented textbook for graduate-level students in business and
finance.
Dr. Brooks combines object-oriented C++ programming with modern
derivatives technology and provides numerous examples to illustrate
complex derivative applications. He covers C++ within the text and
the Borland C++Builder program, on which the book is based, in
extensive appendices. His book combines basic C++ coding with
fundamental finance problems, illustrates traditional techniques
for solving more complicated problems, and develops the reader's
ability to express complex mathematical solutions in the
object-oriented framework of C++. It also reviews derivative
solutions techniques and illustrates them with C++ code, reviews
general approaches to valuing interest rate contingent claims, and
focuses on practical ways to implement them. The result is a book
that trains readers simultaneously in the substance of its field,
financial derivatives, and the programming of solutions to problems
in it.
Bowditch refuses to see African nations as basketcases on a
continent of despair; instead, he examines Ghana as a country of
potential opportunity in an economically emerging continent. He
explores a new generation of issues around the connection between
cultural values and behavior to provide international investors,
Ghanaians, and others with a better understanding of the
Ghanaian--and African--business environment.
Drawing upon some seven years of living and working in Ghana,
Bowditch provides several different contemporary vantage points on
sub-Saharan Africa's first independent nation. First examining the
core cultural values of the Ghanaian people, he then looks at
Ghanaian business practices. The result is an indepth look at how
Ghanaians approach life, business, religion, and family, how that
directly impacts the way they manage their institutions, and how
that differs from prevailing international business behavior.
Bowditch then probes these cultural differences and the frequently
overlooked racial preconceptions that impede relations and
collaboration between Ghanaians, other Africans, and Westerners.
Through his unusually intimate exploration of Ghanaian life,
values, business thinking, and management culture, Bowditch brings
the reader full circle, answering the question: can Africa become
an economic lion?
Using a range of case-studies, this book analyzes corporate
governance relationships between several African countries and the
international community, providing an ethical assessment of issues
surrounding globalization and adherence to external governance
mechanisms. Employing a methodological approach, Corporate
Governance in Africa critiques occidental perspectives of corporate
governance in relation to the needs of separate states, and the
contradictions that arise when local cultures are not taken in to
consideration. With case studies from Egypt, Ghana, Nigeria, South
Africa, Kenya and The Gambia the book presents a comprehensive view
of North, East, West and South Africa with contributions from
global experts in the field. The authors critique the
transformations deemed necessary for governance procedures in order
to facilitate confidence and inward investment for these African
states.
The book provides a study of the investment environment for
international enterprises in China and overseas investment by
Chinese enterprises. Applying statistical methods and up-to-date
data analysis, it examines every aspect of the investment
environment in China. The author's ideas are further illustrated
with 39 figures and diagrams. Its 18 chapters discuss topics
ranging from history, the current situation and problems of foreign
investment in China, to China's policies for attracting foreign
investment, the top 500 global companies in China, urban
competitive analysis and multinational corporations in Beijing. It
also analyzes Chinese investment in foreign countries. It is a
valuable investment guide, and is also a useful reference resource
for academic research and teaching related to international
business and the Chinese economy.
This book explores the integrity of equity markets, addressing such
issues as the exchange vs. customer perspective on price discovery
and the ways market participants deal with key regulatory concerns.
Do market practitioners pass the integrity test? How does "market
integrity" play out globally? What is the overall veracity of the
marketplace? These are some of the key questions considered in this
volume from the viewpoints of traders, economists, financial market
strategists and exchange representative. Titled after the Baruch
College Financial Markets Conference, Market Integrity: Do Our
Equity Markets Pass the Test?, this book is of interest to market
practitioners, trading professionals, academics and students in the
field of financial markets. The Zicklin School of Business
Financial Markets Series presents the insights emerging from a
sequence of conferences hosted by the Zicklin School at Baruch
College for industry professionals, regulators and scholars. Much
more than historical documents, the transcripts from the
conferences are edited for clarity, perspective and context;
material and comments from subsequent interviews with the panelists
and speakers are integrated for a complete thematic presentation.
Each book is focused on a well-delineated topic, but all deliver
broader insights into the quality and efficiency of the U.S. equity
markets and the dynamic forces changing them.
The book is a dialogue between a money manager and a young man who
asks whether or not he should invest. Their conversation explores
How for money and not-for-money investment differ; How accounting
and economic assets compare with social and natural assets; How
time is central to all of investment, building capabilities in the
present which can deliver resources in the future; How banks
collectively create and destroy money; How the yield curve shows
the market interest rates for financial assets of different
durations; How competitive advantage is important in determining
the returns achieved on real assets; How fundamental value differs
from price, or what someone is prepared to pay; How fundamental
analysis and technical analysis of price data provide insights into
risk; How mean-variance analysis of price data is the conventional
approach to risk; How the economic ecosystem creates prices How
capitalism may be a lousy system and yet the best available as it
adapts continuously to align money prices and human values. The
book is for people who want to know how investment works and how
they can invest their savings. I think of it as an amalgam of an
everyman's guide to business and economics, an introduction to
investment, and an apology for 'capitalism'. Ben Paton
This book offers a look at equity markets and what they have
experienced since the 1997 Order Handling Rules were instituted.
Specifically, it examines the tremendous technology innovation,
intensified competition between an expanding set of alternative
trading venues, and continuing regulatory changes that have
occurred. Who have been the key initiators? How has market quality
evolved over this period in response? What further structural and
regulatory changes are still needed? These are among the key
questions addressed in the volume, titled after the Baruch College
Financial Markets Conference entitled Rapidly Changing Securities
Markets: Who are the Initiators? The Zicklin School of Business
Financial Markets Series presents the insights emerging from a
sequence of conferences hosted by the Zicklin School at Baruch
College for industry professionals, regulators, and scholars. Much
more than historical documents, the transcripts from the
conferences are edited for clarity, perspective and context;
material and comments from subsequent interviews with the panelists
and speakers are integrated for a complete thematic presentation.
Each book is focused on a well delineated topic, but all deliver
broader insights into the quality and efficiency of the U.S. equity
markets and the dynamic forces changing them.
This comparative research was triggered by the assessment of
property registration law published in the World Bank Doing
Business reports (DB). The international and interdisciplinary team
aimed to assess how legal certainty was imagined and put in
practice in French and English law, using commercial real estate as
a case study. Not only this study identifies the economic impact of
the law in both jurisdictions, it also looked at the practitioners
functions in the dealing with commercial real estate transactions.
In other words, it analyses the topical position of practitioners
such as the French notaires and the role of solicitors in England.
Nowadays, the profession of notaires is confronted to numerous
challenges. For instance, nationality requirement for its access,
has been ruled by the ECJ as contrary to the freedom of
establishment and art. 49 TFEU and not justified by "the exercise
of public authority".In this study, the authors argue that the
actual nature and the quality of the work done by the practitioners
should be considered as well as financial cost and delays. They
also argue that a liberalisation of professions such as civil law
notaires would have very little impact on the cost associated with
doing business. As a matter of fact, both the English and the
French mechanisms are very similar in their objectives and outcome
even though they handle the same transaction differently, because
of the culturally different relevant angles.
Elgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful
introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and
law, expertly written by the world's leading scholars. Designed to
be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of
the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject
areas. This Advanced Introduction provides an illustrative guide to
private equity, integrating insights from academic research with
examples to derive practical recommendations. Paul Gompers and
Steven Kaplan begin by reviewing the history of private equity then
exploring the evidence on performance of private equity investments
at both the portfolio company level and fund level, documenting the
creation of economic value. The book then presents a set of
actionable frameworks for driving value creation in private equity
investments. It concludes by examining how private equity investors
raise funds and how they successfully manage their private equity
firms. Key Features: Explains what private equity investors do and
how they do it Includes a detailed discussion of career paths in
private equity Links real world examples that illustrate insights
from academic research Provides an overview of the private equity
industry from individual investments to fundraising to firm
management This Advanced Introduction is an excellent resource for
investment bankers and consultants as well as prospective investors
who are looking for a comprehensive yet succinct introduction to
the topic. Scholars interested in the fields of finance and private
equity will find the research and case studies informative and
enlightening.
This volume take the reader through the legal and accounting
principles that govern the valuation of assets. A crucial problem
for legal, accounting, banking and venture capital professionals,
it is also important to owners and managers of IP assets.
China burst onto the world stage in the mid-1980s and in the past
decade has been transformed into a giant magnet for FDI, attracting
capital from all over the world. Everyone wants a piece of the
China action. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the region of
Southeast Asia, tucked as it is geographically beneath China's
southern flank. Much of the FDI inflow into China has been at the
expense of Southeast Asia. But this has been offset by new
opportunities created through China's rapid economic expansion.
This book provides an insightful and objective analysis on how to
be successful in China, especially for Singapore businessmen. The
authors have eloquently distilled several important lessons that
have become apparent for business success in China.
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