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Wall street. A history

Autor Charles R. Geisst

Editorial OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

Wall street. A history
58,12€
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  • Verlag OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
  • ISBN13 9780195115123
  • ISBN10 0195115120
  • Gegenstandsart BUCH
  • Buchseiten 404
  • Jahr der Ausgabe 1996
  • Bindung Stoffeinband

Wall street. A history

Autor Charles R. Geisst

Editorial OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

58,12€
Nicht verfügbar, verfügbarkeit bestätigen
Kostenloser Versand
Festland Spanien
KOSTENLOSER Versand ab 19 €

zum spanischen Festland

Versand in 24/48 Stunden

5% Rabatt auf alle Bücher

Kostenlose Abholung in der Buchhandlung

Komm und lass dich überraschen!

Buch Details

In the Seven Years Since the Publication of the first edition of Wall Street, America's financial industry has undergone a series of wrenching events that have dramatically changed the nation's economic landscape. The bull market of the 1990s came to a close, ushering in the end of the dot-com boom, a record number of mergers occurred, and accounting scandals in companies like Enron and WorldCom shook the financial industry to its core. In this wide-ranging volume, financial historian Charles R. Geisst provides the first history of Wall Street, explaining how a small, concentrated pocket of lower Manhattan came to have such enormous influence in national and world affairs. In this updated edition, Geisst sums up the recent turbulence that has threatened America's financial industry. He shows how in 1997 thirty NASDAQ market-makers paid a record $1.3 billion fine for price irregulaties in stocks. He makes sense of the closing of the bull market, and explains a major change in the accounting rules for mergers that caused monumental losses for companies like AOL Time Warner. He recounts how in the aftermath of the speculative fever that swept Wall Street in the 1990s, the scandals at Enron, Tyco, Worldcom, and Conseco represent a last gasp of mergermania and a fallout from a bubble-like market. Wall Street is at once the story of the street itself, from the days when the wall was merely a defensive barricade built by Peter Stuyvesant, to the modern 'billion-dollar' computer-driven colossus of today. In a broader sense it is an engaging economic history of the United States, the role Wall Street played in making America the most powerful economy in the world, and the many challenges to that role it has faced in recent years.