A rare analytical look at the financial crisis using simple
analysis
The economic crisis that began in 2008 revealed the numerous
problems in our financial system, from the way mortgage loans were
produced to the way Wall Street banks leveraged themselves.
Curiously enough, however, most of the reasons for the banking
collapse are very similar to the reasons that Long-Term Capital
Management (LTCM), the largest hedge fund to date, collapsed in
1998. "The Crisis of Crowding" looks at LTCM in greater detail,
with new information, for a more accurate perspective, examining
how the subsequent hedge funds started by Meriwether and former
partners were destroyed again by the lapse of judgement in allowing
Lehman Brothers to fail.
Covering the lessons that were ignored during LTCM's collapse
but eventually connected to the financial crisis of 2008, the book
presents a series of lessons for hedge funds and financial markets,
including touching upon the circle of greed from homeowners to real
estate agents to politicians to Wall Street.Guides the reader
through the real story of Long-Term Capital Management with
accurate descriptions, previously unpublished data, and
interviewsDescribes the lessons that hedge funds, as well as the
market, should have learned from LTCM's collapseExplores how the
financial crisis and LTCM are a global phenomena rooted in failures
to account for risk in crowded spaces with leverageExplains why
quantitative finance is essential for every financial institution
from risk management to valuation modeling to algorithmic tradingIs
filled with simple quantitative analysis about the financial
crisis, from the Quant Crisis of 2007 to the failure of Lehman
Brothers to the Flash Crash of 2010
A unique blend of storytelling and sound quantitative analysis,
"The Crisis of Crowding" is one of the first books to offer an
analytical look at the financial crisis rather than just an account
of what happened. Also included are a layman's guide to the
Dodd-Frank rules and what it means for the future, as well as an
evaluation of the Fed's reaction to the crisis, QE1, QE2, and
QE3.
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