You know "what" happened during the financial crisis
... now it is time to understand "why "the financial
system came so close to falling over the edge of the
abyss and "why "it could happen again.""Wall Street has
been saved, but it hasn't been reformed. What is the
problem? Suzanne McGee provides a penetrating look at
the forces that transformed Wall Street from its
traditional role as a capital-generating and
economy-boosting engine into a behemoth operating with
only its own short-term interests in mind and with
reckless disregard for the broader financial system and
those who relied on that system for their well being and
prosperity. Primary among these influences was "Goldman
Sachs envy" the self-delusion on the part of Richard
Fuld of Lehman Brothers, Stanley O'Neil of Merrill
Lynch, and other power brokers (egged on by their
shareholders) that taking more risk would enable their
companies to make even "more" money than Goldman Sachs.
That hubris--and that narrow-minded focus on maximizing
their short-term profits--led them to take extraordinary
risks that they couldn't manage and that later severely
damaged, and in some cases destroyed, their businesses,
wreaking havoc on the nation's economy and millions of
401(k)s in the process. In a world that boasted more
hedge funds than Taco Bell outlets, McGee demonstrates
how it became ever harder for Wall Street to fulfill its
function as the financial system's version of a power
grid, with capital, rather than electricity, flowing
through it. But just as a power grid can be strained
beyond its capacity, so too can a "financial grid"
collapse if its functions are distorted, as happened
with Wall Street as it became increasingly self-serving
and motivated solely by short-term profits. Through
probing analysis, meticulous research, and dozens of
interviews with the bankers, traders, research analysts,
and investment managers who have been on the front lines
of financial booms and busts, McGee provides a practical
understanding of our financial "utility," and how it
touches everyone directly as an investor and indirectly
through the power--capital--that makes the economy work.
Wall Street is as important to the economy and the
overall functioning of our society as our electric and
water utilities. But it doesn't act that way. The
financial system has been saved from destruction but as
long as the mind-set of "chasing Goldman Sachs" lingers,
it will not have been reformed. As banking undergoes its
biggest transformation since the 1929 crash and the
Great Depression, McGee shows where it stands today and
points to where it needs to go next, examining the
future of those financial institutions supposedly "too
big to fail." "From the Hardcover edition." |
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