-
The End of Wall Street (Hardback)
$26.02 - Save $1.93 (6%) - RRP $27.95 Free shipping worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 24 hours | |- Also available in...
- Paperback $12.41
Short Description for The End of Wall StreetThis revelatory work offers a blow-by-blow account of America's biggest financial collapse since the Great Depression. Drawing on 180 interviews, Lowenstein tells, with grace, wit, and razor-sharp understanding, the full story of the end of Wall Street.
Full description- Publisher: The Penguin Press
- Published: 20 May 2010
- Format: Hardback 337 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Financial Crises & Disasters | Economic History | Finance | Investment & Securities | History Of The Americas
- ISBN 13: 9781594202391 ISBN 10: 1594202397
- Sales rank: 152,287
Other books
Full description for The End of Wall Street
The roots of the mortgage bubble and the story of the Wall Street collapse-and the government's unprecedented response-from our most trusted business journalist. "The End of Wall Street" is a blow-by-blow account of America's biggest financial collapse since the Great Depression. Drawing on 180 interviews, including sit-downs with top government officials and Wall Street CEOs, Lowenstein tells, with grace, wit, and razor-sharp understanding, the "full" story of the end of Wall Street as we knew it. Displaying the qualities that made "When Genius Failed" a timeless classic of Wall Street-his sixth sense for narrative drama and his unmatched ability to tell complicated financial stories in ways that resonate with the ordinary reader-Roger Lowenstein weaves a financial, economic, and sociological thriller that indicts America for succumbing to the siren song of easy debt and speculative mortgages. "The End of Wall Street" is rife with historical lessons and bursting with fast-paced action. Lowenstein introduces his story with precisely etched, laserlike profiles of Angelo Mozilo, the Johnny Appleseed of subprime mortgages who spreads toxic loans across the landscape like wild crabapples, and moves to a damning explication of how rating agencies helped gift wrap faulty loans in the guise of triple-A paper and a takedown of the academic formulas that-once again- proved the ruin of investors and banks. Lowenstein excels with a series of searing profiles of banking CEOs, such as the ferretlike Dick Fuld of Lehman and the bloodless Jamie Dimon of JP Morgan, and of government officials from the restless, deal-obsessed Hank Paulson and the overmatched Tim Geithner to the cerebral academic Ben Bernanke, who sought to avoid a repeat of the one crisis he spent a lifetime trying to understand-the Great Depression. Finally, we come to understand the majesty of Lowenstein's theme of liquidity and capital, which explains the origins of the crisis and that positions the collapse of 2008 as the greatest ever of Wall Street's unlearned lessons. "The End of Wall Street" will be essential reading as we work to identify the lessons of the market failure and start to rebuild.

