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Hardcover The Equity Culture: The Story of the Global Stock Market Book

ISBN: 0374281750

ISBN13: 9780374281755

The Equity Culture: The Story of the Global Stock Market

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

An Expert Chronicle of the Market's Ever-Growing Role Worldwide The modern stock market, B. Mark Smith's new book makes clear, is only one component of a much broader "equity culture"a lively and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Insightful!

This book provides a concise and highly readable introduction to the development of the market economy. Beginning with ancient Rome and continuing to the first years of the twenty-first century, author B. Mark Smith traces the ups and downs of financial markets. He shows how and why trading began, explains the great bubbles and panics, and connects the course of markets to the evolution of such economic institutions as central banks. You will learn about some of the more colorful characters, the rogues and geniuses behind great frauds and great rescues. The book moves quickly and cleanly through the dense thicket of market analysis. The author identifies the great market theorists, from Joseph de la Vega through Louis Bachelier to Harry Markowitz and beyond. Moreover, he considers markets on a global scale, paying attention now to Paris, now to Japan, now to Taipei. This is a great deal of material to treat in a single book and any one of the subjects undertaken could easily justify not just one but several volumes. Thus, consider this to be something like a stroll through a market museum with a good docent as your guide. Those who have already read extensively about markets and economics will appreciate the book's light touch and amusing anecdotes. Those new to the field will appreciate its accessibility. We recommend this highly to all readers with an interest in finance.

We're all owners now........

B. Mark Smith has provided in The Equity Culture a readable account of the evolution of the global equity market. Emphasis on the word global. This is not the history of the U.S. stock market, or what he later refers to as the Anglo-American market, but an account of equity markets in Japan, Germany, Malaysia, and elsewhere, though invariably much of the focus is on Japan, the U.S., the U.K. and Germany. He is very good at weaving into his story the role of market theory from Markowitz on portfolio theory to more recent debates on the efficient market theory (the latter frankly I don't understand). Readers will also find here a more sophisticated treatments of so-called market "bubbles." In my view, he correctly limits the standard explanation of such events to stock markets that are sufficiently developed, or left un-regulated; hence, the so-called Japanese "bubble" is not a case of investors acting on emotion rather than reason because government policy had institutionalized high values. This is an excellent overview, and he is to be commended for managing to avoid the temptation to stray too far from the main story line. After all any number of tributary topics he covers might well themselves provide the basis of another volume -- including, the role of central banks in crisis periods, the growing influx of pension dollars into equity markets, the co-variance of global markets and, of course, the recurring problem, most recently manifested by Enron and the Italian holding company, Parmalatt(?), of efforts to conceal losses through accounting machinations (see Japan's version in the discussion of Sanyo Special Steel (184-185). I think there is a small error regarding the U.S. crash and that is that "Black Tuesday" was October, not November 29th (see page 126), 1929. Not a big mistake when one bears in mind Galbraith's comment that the singular feature of the crash of 1929 was that the "worst continued to worsen." Overall, an excellent, very readable introduction to the global evolution of equity markets. Stay tuned, though, this history continues to evolve.....

making sense out of irrational human behavior

The Equity Culture: The Story of the Global Stock MarketBy B. Mark Smith Publisher: Farrar Straus & Giroux; 1st edition, Hardcover (August 2003) B. Mark Smith gives the reader a history and economics refresher in the Equity Culture: the Story of the Global Stock Market. The book, 352 pages, is not hard to read and provides an interesting historical overview of the equity markets. Smith, a former stock trader with FS/Boston and Goldman Sach, is also the author of Toward Rational Exuberance: the Evolution of the Modern Stock Market. In the Equity Culture, Smith traces equity market activity from the Mississippi Company in the 18th Century to the more academic and sophisticated computer models of today. Through it all, Smith shows the reader that while times may change, human behavior around a rising equity market does not. The real thesis of Smith's book is that equity market bubbles and busts contain three consistent historical trends(1) a new product or development; (2) increased purchasing activity by professional investors in the company or companies selling or providing the new product or development followed by investment by an expanding pool of inexperienced investors; and, (3) easy credit. Each significant downturn in an equity market, from the Romans to the recent technology bust, are preceded by these market elements, according to Smith. The Equity Culture provides an interesting and wide angle view of the seemingly senseless ups and downs of the equity markets. The book is no novel, but Smith makes what most would consider a pretty dry subject an interesting read. For market veterans, the book provides good perspective; for market rookies a good lessen: look out!!

A great history of stock markets from ancient Rome to Enron

I monitor stock prices daily as part of my job, and to fuel my personal investment decisions -- needless to say, I am far from being alone. Yet only decades ago, stocks were clearly not that important for the majority. What has happened? What is happening? This book traces the history of stock from as far as the Roman Empire to modern days through the Middle-Ages.This book explains that although stocks have been around for a long time, only quite recently have they been so widely used, and only recently have stock prices had such an influence on every major country's economy around the world. A great, well-documented perspective on today's stock-centric economy, and a highly suggested read for anyone dealing with stocks in any way.
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