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- naslov
MOBS, MESSIAHS, AND MARKETS Surviving the Public Spectacle in Finance and Politics
- autor
William Bonner, Lila Rajiva
- šifra
- B-32952
- izdanje
- n/a
- jezik
- engleski
- pismo
- latinica
- izdavač
- John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
- štamparija
- Printed in the United States of America.
- godina
- 2007.
- opis
- tvrd povez, sa ilustr pl omotom, 424 strane, grafikoni, 23.5cm
- stanje
- kao nova
- cena
- 1,400.-din
- knjiga status
- u prodaji
- širi opis
Collectively, people think and act in ways that are different from how they think and act as individuals. Understanding these differences, says William (Bill) Bonner - a longtime maverick observer of the financial world and the vagaries of the investing public - is vital to preserving your wealth and personal dignity. From the witch hunts of the early modern world to the war on terror, from the dot-com mania to the real estate bubble, people have always been caught up in frauds, conceits, and wild guesses - often with devastating results. In Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets, Bonner and coauthor Lila Rajiva show groupthink at work in an improbable array of instances throughout history and reveal why swimming against the current pays. They explain why people so often abandon good sense and good behavior to "follow the crowd" and show you how to avoid getting caught up in the public spectacles around you.
If an investor merely recognizes the way mob sentiment works, the author points out, he is far ahead of most others. Ordinary people, for example, turn over billions of dollars' worth of their hard-earned money to brokers and mutual fund managers every day - immediate, tangible, personal money - believing that strangers will give them back even more. Whatever would make them think so?
Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets demonstrates that investors are in fact caught between a rock and a soft place-between the private world they can understand and master and the misleading public spectacle of the markets. "The further away you get from your investments, and the less you suffer the consequences if they go bad, the worse your performance will be," say Bonner and Rajiva. "That's why 'collective' investments like index-linked funds, mutual funds, hedge funds, insurance funds, and pension funds are usually so bad. The investors are too far from the facts - and the managers are too far from the consequences."
ISBN 978-0-470-11232-8
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