05/22/2009 12:51:08 AM
If you want to understand why we are in the mess we are in, you can do worse than read or listen to Gillian Tett.

Gillian studied Social Anthropology at Cambridge and then went into journalism with the Financial Times. Most books on finance are pretty dull affairs, but her book Fool's Gold, which tells the story of the derrivatives team at J.P. Morgan reads like a thriller.

You can get a sampling of her intellect and storytelling abilities by listening to a lecture she gave recently at the London School of Economics.


Posted by Ed Cotton
Tags: money (7) finance (12) gilliantett (1) banks (10) foolsgold (1)

01/21/2009 11:07:26 AM (1)
Nice visual from JP Morgan on current market caps for banks around the world.

Via Paul Kedrosky Changes in Banks Market Cap- 2008 over 2007

Posted by Ed Cotton
Tags: money (7) banks (10) banking (19)

12/22/2008 09:20:58 AM (1)
American Public Media 's Marketplace does a nice job of explaining Hedge Funds.

A look inside hedge funds from Marketplace on Vimeo.

Posted by Ed Cotton
Tags: money (7) finance (12) hedgefund (1)

10/09/2008 05:15:23 PM
Top Gear presenter, Jeremy Clarkson- a wealth man made rich by celebrity vents his frustration at the banking system and the current crisis.

"As I sat there on that horrible Monday, watching the whole financial world on the brink of collapse, I thought back to all the midnight oil I’d burnt writing these columns, all the crappy hotels I’d stayed in while making various television shows. And how all of that revenue would be lost for a raft of reasons I simply didn’t understand.

Of course I made strenuous efforts to get my money out of AIG as soon as the scale of its problems became apparent. But it wasn’t possible. It had shut the fund in which I’d invested and it would remain closed for three months while it tried to sell the assets. “We need to do this in an orderly fashion,” said the man on the phone, calmly.

Inwardly I was screaming. I don’t give a shit about an orderly fashion, any more than a man in the trenches wants to look smart while running for his life. It’s my money. I gave it to you. You’ve squandered it on a Mexican’s house in San Diego and a stupid football team and that’s your problem. Not mine.

It turned out, however, that I was wrong. It was my problem, so I decided to try to understand banking. And what I’ve gleaned from a two-week crash course is that it is completely unfathomable. There isn’t a single person in the entire world who has the first idea how the system works."




Posted by Ed Cotton
Tags: money (7) banks (10) banking (19)

10/01/2008 09:47:18 AM
Cantos has a really good discussion on its site where it explores the implications of the credit crunch on the corporate sector.

The participants include: Robin Bew from the Economist Intelligence Unit, Davide Sola from the (ESCP-EAP) European School of Management, and Paul Anning from Osborne Clarke. It's a long and worthwhile read and contains this interesting quote from Davide Sola.

"If we look at a few numbers, if we look at in the States at the overall level of indebtedness, there was an interesting article from Martin Wolf a few days ago. In the 80s it was about 130% of GDP of the US, now it's 350%. Where does it come that from? The financial sector, number one. Five times it moved from 20 to 130, and also from 50 to 100. Which means that the business sector, they always used that. And banks usually were predicating and saying: "You need to have a certain capital structure, you need to have certain capital requirements if you want me to give you some debt." But then if you look at the bank Lehman Brothers went bust on 31x the capital structure they had.

So, you are predicating to your client that they should have a good capital structure but you're doing exactly the opposite. So I think that this correction is going to allow the people to return and say: "I am an industrialist, I am a service company, I should concentrate on what I do in order to cut cost. And I am a bank, I need to start to be a banker again rather than a financial engineer."




Posted by Ed Cotton
Tags: money (7) creditcrunch (2) focus (1) economy (9)

03/07/2008 08:50:09 AM
This is a really nice idea.

Smarty Pig is a site that helps people save for specific goals and allows friends and family to contribute to those savings plans.

Saving Meets the Social Network

Traditional banks should look at this because the 2.0 companies are snapping at their heels with innovations like this.



Thanks to Colin



Posted by Ed Cotton
Tags: money (7) socialnetwork (5) savings (1) banking (19) bank (2)

Next    Articles for tag money (7 total).