From long, first-hand experience as president of his own
financial advertising agency, Alec Benn offers a unique, inside
look at America's investment community, at a time of changes so
profound that their impact and implications are still with us.
Based not on public relations handouts (although he himself has
written them) but on frank, revealing talks with people who
actually participated in the events of those tumultuous seven
years, on official oral histories (hitherto concealed), and on his
own keen observations, Benn shows how those events and changes
really occurred. He reveals that The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
was in far greater peril of collapse in 1970 than anyone, except a
few insiders, has ever known. He exposes how many of the most
significant changes ever to affect investors really came about. And
he provides new insights into the people who caused, influenced, or
sometimes opposed the reforms we now take for granted, as well as
into the impact of historical figures such as Richard Nixon and
Ross Perot. Informative, entertaining, and impeccably researched
and documented, Benn's book gives us new information to help
evaluate the investment world of today, and to appreciate how
dangerous it was at another time, a time that some say appears
uncomfortably familiar.
Among the many topics Benn examines in depth is the creation of
the Securities Investors Protection Corporation, the agency that
insures against loss of the cash and securities left by investors
in their brokers' hands. He shows how stock brokers' commissions
came to be competitive and low, instead of fixed and high (a
special benefit for today's day traders), and how members of The
New York Stock Exchange became able to sell shares in their firms
to the general public, opening a bountiful source of permanent
capital. He goes on to cover the creation of the Central
Certificate System, which led to a dramatic increase in trading
volume later, and how the NYSE was reorganized, benefiting not only
members but investors as well. Benn also explores how NYSE member
firms became authorized to sell annuities and other insurance
products, in itself a billion-dollar business. Finally, in an
especially telling chapter, he discusses how and why discrimination
on Wall Street based on class, religion, race, and gender declined
(and by inference, why in some places it still lingers.)
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