Tuesday, 23 September 2008
Try before you buy at GI
You can now read before you buy at the Global Investor Bookshop with Google Book Previews. If there's a preview available, you'll see the button under the cover image on the book page.
Thursday, 15 May 2008
Global Investor Bulletin - Alexander Elder's new book
This week...
1. Rigged
2. Sell and Sell Short, a new book by Alexander Elder, Pre-order Now
3. Guru Focus - Erich Florek
4. The Little Book That Makes You Rich
1. Rigged
Rigged : The True Story of a Wall Street Novice who Changed the World of Oil Forever
by Ben Mezrich
From the author who brought you the bestselling 'Bringing Down the House', this is the startling, rags-to-riches story of an Italian-American kid from the streets of Brooklyn who claws his way into the wild, frenetic world of the oil exchange.
After conquering the hallowed halls of Harvard Business School, he enters the testosterone-laced warrens of the Merc Exchange, the asylum-like oil exchange located in Lower Manhattan. A place where billions of dollars trade hands every week, the Merc is like a casino on crack, where former garbage men become millionaires overnight, where fist fights break out on the trading floor and men have been known to bring prostitutes as dates to company dinners.
This ordinary kid has traded Brooklyn for the gold-lined hotel palaces of Dubai. He keeps company on the decks of private yachts in Monte Carlo- teeming with half-naked girls flown in by Saudi Sheiks and makes deals in the dangerous back alleys of Beijing.
Rigged is the explicit, exclusive, true story behind the headlines that dominate the world stage...
RRP : £10.99
Special Offer : £7.69
Read more or buy Rigged
2. Sell and Sell Short, a new book by Alexander Elder, Pre-order Now
Sell and Sell Short by Alexander Elder
Due to be published next week, this brand new book by Alexander Elder asserts that all traders should learn to short. He shows what to look for at market tops and how to jump onto a downtrend. He explains how to use important indicators of short selling activity, such as the short-interest ratio. A special chapter is dedicated to shorting non-equity instruments, such as futures, options, and forex.
Many beginners approach selling in a vague and indecisive manner. Sell and Sell Short offers traders the essential lessons, rules, and instructions all traders need. This book will help you make the right choices in the markets and put you on the road to trading success.
RRP : £45.00
Special Offer : £34.65
Read more or buy Sell & Sell Short
3. Guru Focus - Erich Florek
Over the next few weeks, we're going to have look at some of the books that the gurus who are listed on http://www.global-investor.com/gurus/ recommend. This week our fetaured Guru is Erich Florek, who started trading stocks, warrants, and futures when he was 17 years old and is today one of Europe's leading experts on technical day trading.
Erich Florek recommends:
Hit and Run Trading 1
by Jeff Cooper
Read more...
Hit and Run Trading 2
by Jeff Cooper
Read more...
Long-Term Secrets to Short-Term Trading
by Larry Williams
Read more...
Street Smarts
by Lawrence Connors, Linda Raschke
Read more...
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets
by John Murphy
Read more...
The New Science of Technical Analysis
by Thomas DeMark
Read more...
For more books recommended by Erich Florek, please have a look at:
http://www.global-investor.com/gurus/Florek/
4. The Little Book That Makes You Rich
The Little Book That Makes You Rich by Louis Navellier
Written by Louis Navellier - one of the most well-respected and successful growth investors of our day - this book offers readers a fundamental understanding of how to get rich using the best in growth investing strategies.
Filled with in-depth insights and practical advice, The Little Book That Makes You Rich gives individual investors specific tools for selecting stocks based on the factors that years of research have proven to lead to growth stock profits. These factors include analysts' moves, profit margins expansion, and rapid sales growth.
RRP : £10.99
Special Offer : £9.34
Read More...
1. Rigged
2. Sell and Sell Short, a new book by Alexander Elder, Pre-order Now
3. Guru Focus - Erich Florek
4. The Little Book That Makes You Rich
1. Rigged
Rigged : The True Story of a Wall Street Novice who Changed the World of Oil Forever
by Ben Mezrich
From the author who brought you the bestselling 'Bringing Down the House', this is the startling, rags-to-riches story of an Italian-American kid from the streets of Brooklyn who claws his way into the wild, frenetic world of the oil exchange.
After conquering the hallowed halls of Harvard Business School, he enters the testosterone-laced warrens of the Merc Exchange, the asylum-like oil exchange located in Lower Manhattan. A place where billions of dollars trade hands every week, the Merc is like a casino on crack, where former garbage men become millionaires overnight, where fist fights break out on the trading floor and men have been known to bring prostitutes as dates to company dinners.
This ordinary kid has traded Brooklyn for the gold-lined hotel palaces of Dubai. He keeps company on the decks of private yachts in Monte Carlo- teeming with half-naked girls flown in by Saudi Sheiks and makes deals in the dangerous back alleys of Beijing.
Rigged is the explicit, exclusive, true story behind the headlines that dominate the world stage...
RRP : £10.99
Special Offer : £7.69
Read more or buy Rigged
2. Sell and Sell Short, a new book by Alexander Elder, Pre-order Now
Sell and Sell Short by Alexander Elder
Due to be published next week, this brand new book by Alexander Elder asserts that all traders should learn to short. He shows what to look for at market tops and how to jump onto a downtrend. He explains how to use important indicators of short selling activity, such as the short-interest ratio. A special chapter is dedicated to shorting non-equity instruments, such as futures, options, and forex.
Many beginners approach selling in a vague and indecisive manner. Sell and Sell Short offers traders the essential lessons, rules, and instructions all traders need. This book will help you make the right choices in the markets and put you on the road to trading success.
RRP : £45.00
Special Offer : £34.65
Read more or buy Sell & Sell Short
3. Guru Focus - Erich Florek
Over the next few weeks, we're going to have look at some of the books that the gurus who are listed on http://www.global-investor.com/gurus/ recommend. This week our fetaured Guru is Erich Florek, who started trading stocks, warrants, and futures when he was 17 years old and is today one of Europe's leading experts on technical day trading.
Erich Florek recommends:
Hit and Run Trading 1
by Jeff Cooper
Read more...
Hit and Run Trading 2
by Jeff Cooper
Read more...
Long-Term Secrets to Short-Term Trading
by Larry Williams
Read more...
Street Smarts
by Lawrence Connors, Linda Raschke
Read more...
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets
by John Murphy
Read more...
The New Science of Technical Analysis
by Thomas DeMark
Read more...
For more books recommended by Erich Florek, please have a look at:
http://www.global-investor.com/gurus/Florek/
4. The Little Book That Makes You Rich
The Little Book That Makes You Rich by Louis Navellier
Written by Louis Navellier - one of the most well-respected and successful growth investors of our day - this book offers readers a fundamental understanding of how to get rich using the best in growth investing strategies.
Filled with in-depth insights and practical advice, The Little Book That Makes You Rich gives individual investors specific tools for selecting stocks based on the factors that years of research have proven to lead to growth stock profits. These factors include analysts' moves, profit margins expansion, and rapid sales growth.
RRP : £10.99
Special Offer : £9.34
Read More...
Wednesday, 26 March 2008
Women traders
On this day, 26 March, in 1973 women were were allowed on to the floor of the London Stock Exchange for the first time.
Friday, 21 March 2008
Hedge fund performance
Pommygranate blogs on hedge funds-
In order to keep the client money rolling in, hedge funds have to show to the world that they really do make outsized returns. Hence these ever ingenious folk have come up with a unique concept - 'survivor bias'. This means that the HF Indices showing overall returns exclude those HFs that have gone bust (about 1 in 5 each year) so blostering the average returns. Neat, huh?His other Ten Things You Should Know About Hedge Funds.
The danger of Black Scholes
An article by Michael Lewis in Portfolio magazine points out the flaws in the Black Scholes model. One of which is the higher occurence of extreme market moves than previously assumed (on the same topic see also Nassim Taleb in The Black Swan). Another problem is the difficulty of taking a short position - and dynamically managing that position - when a market is crashing.
This is not just of academic interest, as according to Lewis-
This is not just of academic interest, as according to Lewis-
At the end of 2006, according to the Bank for International Settlements, there were $415 trillion in derivatives—that is, $415 trillion in securities for which there is no completely satisfactory pricing model. Added to this are trillions more in exchange-traded options, employee stock options, mortgage bonds, and God knows what else—most of which, presumably, are still priced using some version of Black-Scholes.Lewis concludes-
Financial panics have become almost commonplace; events that are meant to occur once in a millennium now seem to occur every few years. Could this be because the financial system was built on an idea that badly underestimates the risk of catastrophes—and so conspires with human nature to create them?
S&P 500 volatility at 70-year high
According to a Reuters report, volatility of the S&P500 Index (as measured by the VIX Index) is at a 70 year high. The report says-
Measured by daily changes of at least 1 percent in the index, volatility has soared since credit concerns became a critical issue in the summer of 2007
Thursday, 20 March 2008
The stock market today and in the 1970s
From an article in today's Telegraph, written by George Blakey, author of A History of the London Stock Market-
The article ends-
While it is tempting to to blame today's chaotic market conditions on the complications resulting from the introduction of countless new exchange-traded derivatives over the past decade, there's nothing new about booms and busts.
They originate in periods of credit expansion and end in periods of credit contraction, a sequence that gives banks a pivotal role to play. This was very much the case in 1972-1975.
The abolition of credit controls and the opening up of competition in 1971 paved the way for the secondary banks and the hire-purchase companies to make inroads into what had once been the exclusive preserve of the big commercial banks, and all went on a lending spree, principally funding property investment.
When it all came tumbling down, thanks to a soaring oil price and a domestic background of strict price controls coupled with a wages free-for-all, the banks ran for cover and called in their loans. The fact that many borrowers were unable to repay them meant that the banks were in big trouble.
One by one the secondary banks collapsed, and rumours swirled around the clearing banks, prompting the Bank of England to issue a denial that that National Westminster Bank had ever requested or been offered large scale support as its shares slipped below par.
The article ends-
This one is going to run and run, and when triple A mortgage-backed securities are getting tarred with the subprime brush,one lesson we can heed from 1974 is the advice Jim Slater gave to his shareholders in May of that year when the stock market was poised to halve again, "Cash is the best investment now".
Wednesday, 12 March 2008
Tuesday, 11 March 2008
You want a real crisis?
Tom Stevenson in the Telegraph today reviews the new book A History of the London Stock Market 1945-2007, and puts the current market volatility in some perspective-
The year 1974 opened with a sky-high oil price, miners and rail workers on strike, a million laid off as energy-starved industries cut production and sterling in free-fall. NUM vice-president Mick McGahey called on troops who had been drafted in to keep coal moving to remember their working-class roots and defy orders. Tony Benn plotted state intervention in Britain's biggest companies while Denis Healey promised to squeeze the rich until the pips squeaked. Both NatWest and Lloyds fell below their par values and by the end of the year the FT30 had fallen 70pc below its May 1972 high.
Monday, 10 March 2008
Schroders Agriculture Fund closed
The Telegraph reports today that Schroders has closed its $6bn agricultural fund after too many investors rushed to plough money into it.
The Alternative Solutions Agriculture Fund, invested in grains and livestock, returned 48pc since it was launched in October 2006.
The fund's top five holdings at the start of the year were wheat, soybean, coffee, corn and sugar.
The Alternative Solutions Agriculture Fund, invested in grains and livestock, returned 48pc since it was launched in October 2006.
The fund's top five holdings at the start of the year were wheat, soybean, coffee, corn and sugar.
Thursday, 6 March 2008
Buffett back on top
The BBC reports that Warren Buffet has reclaimed the title as the world's richest man. Last year Buffett's wealth increased $10bn to $62bn.
A lot of money, $62bn. But how much is 62 billion (or 62,000,000,000)? Let's look at time-
A lot of money, $62bn. But how much is 62 billion (or 62,000,000,000)? Let's look at time-
- 62 billion seconds ago it was the year 42AD - the year that the apostle Paul converted to Christianity and Claudius was emperor of the Roman Empire.
- 62 billion minutes ago was the year 115,952BC - it's difficult to say exactly what was happening in the world this year - history hadn't been invented yet - but generally Homo Sapiens (that's us, modern people) were just evolving in Africa.
A billion here, a billion there, pretty soon...
Forbes magazine has just published its latest rich list. Some highlights-
- A record 1,125 individuals with a combined net worth of $4.4 trillion made it into Forbes' 2008 list of billionaires.
- Two-thirds of those on the list are classified as self-made billionaires, and 50 of them are under the age of 40.
- Mark Zuckerberg, 23, the founder of the social networking site Facebook, joins the list as the world's youngest billionaire.
- Patrice Motsepe joins the list as South Africa's first black billionaire with a net worth of $2.4bn.
- The world's richest woman is the French L'Oreal chief, Liliane Bettencourt, 17th on the Forbes list with a net wealth of $22.9bn.
Tuesday, 4 March 2008
The least well-timed investment decision of this or any age
Between July 1999 and March 2002, Gordon Brown sold 395 tonnes of the UK’s gold at an average price of $275.6.
Robert Peston calls Mr Brown's trade as one of the-
Today gold traded above $984.
Robert Peston calls Mr Brown's trade as one of the-
“least well-timed investment decisions of this or any age”
Today gold traded above $984.
Tuesday, 19 February 2008
Don't forget inflation
According to the FT's Alphaville blog today-
What is remarkable about the past 20 years is not the performance of stocks, but the way inflation was contained.Now, Barclays says, this is coming to an end. Taking a four-year rolling average, inflation on both sides of the Atlantic has risen by more than 1 per cent during the current expansion - the first time this has happened since inflation was tamed in the early 1980s.
This is attributable to the growth of the developing world. With China and other countries demanding more, and the supply of resources limited, the logical consequence is inflation.
With inflation back as a real risk, policymakers no longer have the easy solution they have used for the past 20 years - cutting interest rates at the first sign of trouble. That implies the current credit crisis is not another turn in the cycle, but the end of an anomalous period when inflation was under control. It also implies the level of inflation in China is crucial.
Wednesday, 13 February 2008
Dow hits 7000!
On this day (13 February) 1997 the Dow closed over 7000 points for the first time. In the subsequent 11 years to today the Dow has risen 76%, a compound annual rate of 5.3%.
Source: The UK Stock Market Almanac 2008
Source: The UK Stock Market Almanac 2008
Tuesday, 12 February 2008
A new boy in the City
Extract from a book-
From: Marber on Markets, Brian Marber (2007)
The building that housed the bank was superb. But there were no signs on the doors to mark the lavatories and so, being too embarrassed to ask, for the first fortnight I used the public toilets at Bank Station.
From: Marber on Markets, Brian Marber (2007)
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