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The Fearful Rise of Markets: Short View of Global Bubbles and Synchronised Meltdowns
 
 
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The Fearful Rise of Markets: Short View of Global Bubbles and Synchronised Meltdowns [Hardcover]

John Authers
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 232 pages
  • Publisher: Financial Times/ Prentice Hall; 1 edition (27 May 2010)
  • ISBN-10: 0273731688
  • ISBN-13: 978-0273731689
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 15.6 x 2.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 220,670 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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John Authers
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Review

“This new book is a must-read for every investor....I'd urge anyone with any interest in investing to read it as soon as possible. It may well stop you losing your shirt in the next meltdown!”  Cliff D’Arcy, The Motley Fool

"With two decades of experience in successfully interpreting financial markets, Authers has the curriculum vitae and the confidence to go where no other author has thus far been. His goal in this slender volume is to make understandable why financial markets failed, how investors should protect themselves and what national authorities should do to correct some of the problems. His mission is happily met...Anyone interested in financial markets would benefit from owning a copy."  Financial Times, 5th June 2010

"This book is a must read for investors and for anyone who is interested in the causes of the financial crisis and in how future crises can be avoided. Authers has delivered a highly readable and informative work which goes a long way to explaining the institutionalisation of investment and how the rise and spread of financial markets over the past century have inflated and synchronised bubbles and led to many of the trends which caused the current financial crisis".  Ben Collins, Global Financial Strategy, June 2010

"..helps you better understand how volatility is the central theme of price movement". Larry Connors, an excerpt from his Daily Battle Plan

"Well written in a nontechnical style,The Fearful Rise of Markets includes ample references. Authers divides the narrative into short, highly readable chapters, each containing both an abstract and a summary. The introduction contains a very useful timeline of important events.In short, I would recommend this book to anyone interested in understanding how the financial markets came to play such an important role in our lives."  Brendan O’Connell, CFA

"... does a marvelous job at giving us insight into the challenges facing international markets at the core... As an investment columnist and editor for the Financial Times, Authers has spent the last 20 years covering the industry around the world. One of his greatest skills is to look beyond economics or finance for answers. Instead, Authers examines the behaviors that investors exhibit and the way such behavior has changed everything we know about the market. Fortunately for the reader, Authers takes the extra time to make a discussion of these complex issues readable for the layman. For this reason, the reader is likely to find this work an informed yet accessible look at the challenges facing our markets today. "

Anand Datla, International Affairs Review, January 2012

 

Product Description

“Concise, relevant, and perceptive…this book should be read by all those interested in the way markets operate, be they investors, analysts, or policy makers."

-From the Foreword by Mohamed A. El-Erian, CEO and co-CIO of PIMCO, and author of When Markets Collide

 

“A must-read for anyone concerned about how we can avoid recurring debt-induced busts in the years ahead, or anyone who wonders how to invest if (when!) the crisis returns. Authers' insights on the global financial crisis are profound."

-Robert D. Arnott, Chairman, Research Affiliates, LLC

 

”In a crowded field of works on the financial crisis, Authers' work is unique in both its insight and style."

-Robert R. Johnson, Ph.D., CFA, Senior Managing Director of the CFA Institute

 

"John Authers has combined his journalistically honed FT skills with great insights. Serious investors and policy makers should read this book.”

-David R. Kotok, Chairman and Chief Investment Officer of Cumberland Advisors

 

"John masterfully drives a stake through the myth of global economic decoupling one chapter and example at a time. A must-read in today's economy."

-Vitaliy Katsenelson, Director of Research at Investment Management Associates, Inc, author of Active Value Investing: Making Money in Range-Bound Markets

 

Award-winning Financial Times journalist John Authers explains the multiple roots of repeated financial crises. He explains why it is that investment bubbles now form all at once, all across the world and why  so many markets that were once considered disconnected are now able to collapse all at the same time. He offers a strategy for preventing future financial disasters.

 

Market bubbles are growing ever bigger, ever more terrifying. As soon as one ends, the next one seems already to be inflating.

 

Multiple markets, once disconnected, are aligning in ways that are increasingly unpredictable and uncontrollable.

 

Something has changed. What can we do about it?

 

The Fearful Rise of Markets explains how the world’s markets became synchronised, how they formed a bubble, how they all managed to crash together and then rebound together, and what can be done to prevent another synchronised bust in future.

 

From post-Depression regulation and the 1954 recovery from the Great Crash, through the innovations and mis-steps that led to the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008, to the markets rally of 2009, The Fearful Rise of Markets details massive shifts in the way our money is invested, and in the global balance of economic power.


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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By Feyd
Format:Hardcover
This book tracks the post WWII rise of what one might loosely call non traditional market players - ie. Various types of managed funds that arent directly controlled by the banks. In the early 1950s finance and investing was largely dominated by banks and wealthy individuals investing their own money. - Authers described how these actors were gradually eclipsed by various types of funds controlled by professional managers, who were largely exempt from the regulations limiting banks. He mostly describes the high level global trends, but sometimes gives interesting specific examples to illustrate particular themes and events.

This is not a book on the wider rise of private financial power at the expense of public (government) power. So the collapse of Betton Woods is scarcely mentioned, while the emergence of the Eurodollar market or the decline of capital controls is not covered at all.

Much of the book is about the unfolding crises, from an investors pov, and it also describes trends since the crises was stabilised (up to early 2010) where the author sees a risk of new bubbles developing. In the last few pages the author offers recommendations for how the markets can be made less risky for investors. He writes mostly from a pro free market perspective, though a moderate one which Austrian School types wont like.

A key theme of this book is how global markets have become correlated both regionally and across all asset classes. So traditional diversification now provides much less protection, instead one might use newly emerging methods like thin tail hedging.

The best thing about this book is how wonderfully clear and well presented it is. Easily read in an evening.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Very solid stuff 20 Oct 2010
Format:Hardcover
A comprehensive yet concise account of the history of capital markets from the end of the gold standard to early 2010. Of all the books on the events leading up to the credit crunch, this is the best of the bunch. Contrary to some financial products of the recent years, this book is long on understanding and short on math. Written by the current editor of the FT Lex column, this book should be mandatory reading by all asset allocators and strategists. For me, the take-away remains an improved appreciation of the role and influence of structural changes on the dynamics of capital markets. Prepare to learn a lot!
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
By chaoids
Format:Hardcover
Having very little knowledge of economics and bank systems I was looking for a book that would clarify what has been going on in the world markets in the last years. This book not only did that, with a systematic explanation of the rise of the power of the banks, the relationship between governments and markets to the esoteric lending agreements that banks invent to shuffle around debt between each other. His analysis of how certain investment behavior gives rise to bubbles was fascinating and I do hope some lessons will be learned for the future...
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