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When Markets Collide: Investment Strategies for the Age of Global Economic Change | 
| Author: Mohamed El-erian Publisher: McGraw-Hill Professional Category: Book
List Price: £15.99 Buy New: £9.01 You Save: £6.98 (44%)
New (37) Used (8) from £9.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 950
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 304 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.4 x 1.3
ISBN: 0071592814 Dewey Decimal Number: 381.101 EAN: 9780071592819 ASIN: 0071592814
Publication Date: July 1, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New. Shipped from UK Mainland. Delivery is usually 3 - 4 working days from order by Royal Mail, International Delivery is by Airmail.
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| Customer Reviews:
Strange that this book won the award because it is not good. January 4, 2009 I'm not a professional finance wizzard but I am a well educated citizen of the world with a keen interest in the sector. I enjoy the lighter publications (war stories about the Brothers, Barbarians etc..) on the city/street but also the more analytical stuff.
This book has no message, no content and looses the reader after 2 pages. Don't buy it ! It is not good and does not deserve an award.
I invested time in trying to change my opinion. It is impossible.
This book is not worth a penny - fully agree with Julio Cortazar January 2, 2009 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book is so unbelievably bad that after reading the first 10 pages I was in a rage that I had actually paid money for it. Later I managed to go through selected pages across the whole book, and it got even worse! It is the equivalent of the homework of a 1-st year university student that has collected superficial materials from the media and collected them in a text without having any idea or personal experience on the subject. I have read many good books on investment (among others Inside the House of Money, Hedge Hunters, Hedge Hogging, Fooling Some People Most of the Time) and compared to them, this one is the equivalent of a ponzi-scheme - you pay money and get nothing for it. I also work in finance and I agree with every word that Julio Cortazar says below. The only thing where I have my suspicion is that El Erian himself has written the book. It seems more probable that it was his secretary.
badly written, poorly edited.. December 17, 2008 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
No doubt Mohamed El-Erian have learned the slang of the City and Wall Street. He punishes the reader with a dense, and many times unfocused, book written perhaps too early and with the intention to explain the dynamics that are changing the global economy. He was the first to get a book out so good for him, but it is not the best and definitely you can summarise his message in less than 20 pages. The other 280 pages are full of the same annoying words used by Investment bankers trying to look smart. Overall, the book is a collection of his contributions to Financial Times, WSJ as well as conferences, and Mohamed has been adding comments here and there to make this look like a book. Again and again we read about the "secular" destination and every chapter gets introduced as he did in the preface.
Mohamed is extremelly inteligent and and one of the true intense minds in the market, but his book is awful. I hope he and his editor make an effort in the second edition as they will need to update it with the more juicy events that happened after he wrote this "finished-in-a-rush" book in January 2008. In any case, he won the award of "book of the year" by FT and Goldman Sachs so I guess it is no longer necesary to have writing skills but just telling people how to distinguish "noise" from true signals. Analysts and associates will enjoy this book, but serious professionals will put it down after few pages.
A valuable insight into the rapidly changing economy November 16, 2008 12 out of 15 found this review helpful
When Markets Collide: Investment Strategies for the Age of Global Economic Change Mohamed El Erian has spent many years involved in the emerging markets and this book gives a very valuable insight into the impact that these markets are having on the financial landscape and how to capitalize on it.
In future the emerging markets will be much more important drivers of the world economy than the US, UK, Europe or Japan.
The book talks about the crisis caused by the undervaluation of risk combined with the under-assessment of the quantity of risk outstanding and the consequential fundamental changes taking place. The sheer complexity of the structure of financial products and the inability of the regulatory system to keep on top of these developments has been a catalyst in the resulting financial chaos as has the advance in technology. Technology has undermined the role of the sell side in price discovery which has caused the sell side to extend their activities into new and unfamiliar areas at greater risk of market accidents.
Derivative based products significantly reduced barriers to entry in a range of markets and the complexity stemmed from the ground upwards. Domestic mortgages are taken as a good example. Gone were the days of plain vanilla fixed or floating loans. Instead a plethora of structures were offered, many so complex that household borrowers didn't understand them.
The author emphasises the importance of interpreting signals and differentiating between what is noise and what are real structural changes. He focuses on China as being the most important contributor to world growth. Emerging economies which have greatly benefited from the US and parts of Europe by sustaining consumer demand way beyond income growth are now building up massive amounts of wealth.
Time and time again the Sovereign Wealth Funds are mentioned.
This book gives us food for thought about how to assess the new financial landscape given that many of the emerging markets have shifted from debtors to creditors and are now extremely important drivers of the world economy. It encourages the reader to keep a close eye on the SWFs and their allocation of capital. It gives us some ideas as to construct an international portfolio. It also talks about changes that will be required in organisations such as the IMF.
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