: Henry Kaufman
: Tectonic Shifts in Financial Markets People, Policies, and Institutions
: Palgrave Macmillan
: 9783319483870
: 1
: CHF 33.10
:
: Betriebswirtschaft
: English
: 186
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

In this wide-ranging book, Wall Street legend Henry Kaufman recounts the events surrounding the catastrophic collapse of Lehman Brothers from his then vantage point on the board.  He explains how, ironically, the Federal Reserve's shortcomings contributed to its growing power. And he argues that Dodd-Frank - by sanctioning rather than truly addressing the too-big-to-fail dilemma - squandere a rare opportunity for essential reform.

Whether sparring in print with Citicorp's mercurial Walter Wriston, consulting with British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, spurning a deal with junk bond king Michael Milken, or reflecting on his long-time friend Paul Volcker, Kaufman brings readers inside post-war Wall Street. Looking ahead, he dissects major national and global trends and the likely future of credit markets, financial institutions, and leading economies.

As we search for bearings in the wake of the 2008 financial debacle, Henry Kaufman offers sage and penetrating analysis of today's superheated and - he argues - still-fragile financial world.



Henry Kaufman (PhD, New York University) is President of Henry Kaufman& Company, Inc., an economic and financial consulting firm established in 1988. He previously served as head of research and in the senior management of Salomon Brothers, and worked at The Federal Reserve Bank of New York and in commercial banking. Invited to speak before many leading economic and finance organizations around the world, Dr. Kaufman was three times designated one of the thirty most influential Americans by U.S. News& World Report. In 2001, the National Association of Business Economics conferred on him its prestigious Adam Smith Award.

Preface by Paul Volcker6
Acknowledgments10
Contents11
About the Author13
List of Figures15
1: How It Began at Salomon Brothers16
2: The Art and Science of Forecasting24
3: Presidents versus Fed Chairmen31
4: Paul Volcker, Perennial Public Servant37
5: The Fed and Financial Markets: Greenspan, Bernanke, and Yellen50
6: Charles Sanford and the Rise of Quantitative Risk Management66
7: The Dominance of Walter Wriston78
8: The Bigness Crisis85
9: A Meeting with Margaret Thatcher92
10: Michael Milken: Moving Junk Bonds to Prominence101
11: Financial Crises and Regulatory Reform107
12: The Present Value of Financial History122
13: The Politicizing of the Fed134
14: Tectonic Shifts145
15: You Can’t Go Home Again152
Bibliography169
Index173