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Security Brokers & Investment Managment, New York City - History, Stocks - Investments, Financial Industry - History, Securities - General & Miscellaneous
Opar Trap: Why Wall Street Doesn't Work by Paul Gibson β€” book cover

Opar Trap: Why Wall Street Doesn't Work

by Paul Gibson
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Overview

Greed and scandal almost ruined Wall Street in the eighties. Technology and the lightning-fast movement of money around the globe are combining to complete the job in the nineties. Wall Street is dying. The world's financial capital, grossly mismanaged, over-weight, and sclerotic, is caught in a bear trap from which it cannot escape. Paul Gibson, a long-time financial journalist, goes behind the daily headlines and explains, in a lively and provocative manner, why Wall Street won't work anymore. The financial community is undergoing its greatest changes in recent memory and is learning a bitter truth. Computers and competition make it impossible to earn profits the old-fashioned way, in underwriting or by selling stocks. And the new ethic sweeping the land will not tolerate self-dealing and fraud. Chronicling three decades of regulatory and technological changes, Bear Trap examines the gradual decentralization of the financial markets and the shifts in power that eventually let London and Tokyo challenge New York's supremacy. It is a tale of the evolution of global money, where vast pools of capital - in pension and mutual funds - are bypassing Wall Street. Armed with their own computers and advisers, these institutions trade among themselves. Battered by market crashes, individual investors, too, are turning their backs on Wall Street and the stock exchanges. Bear Trap follows Wall Street's bankers as they adopt the high-risk strategies that produced the financial follies of the 1980s. Turning increasingly from agent to principal, they suppress traditional services in favor of bridge loans, junk bonds, the aiding of raiders, and the rigging of markets, all in a desperate attempt to compensate for lost business. Step by step, the narrative shows a cottage industry leveraging itself into a risky global business, with billions of dollars in debts. The successes or failures on Wall Street and in the financial community affect everyone's lives and fortunes. Already

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Editorials

Library Journal

Long a global center for financial transactions, Wall Street began to lose its unique identity through a combination of scandal, regulatory change, and technological innovation. Elimination of fixed commissions in 1975 was one of several factors that has led to the continuing migration from New York City's famed financial district. Predicting a future in which individuals will trade in markets different from those in which professionals trade, consultant Gibson is gloomy about what lies ahead. Without a more balanced report that includes many of the positive changes that have taken place in the financial industry, this book remains a confused rehash of well-covered scandal and failure. Not recommended.-- Joseph Barth, U.S. Military Acad., West Point, N.Y.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 1993
Publisher
Atlantic Monthly Pr
Pages
246
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780871135346

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