The remarkable true story of the disgraced politician John Stonehouse
Philip Augar Pořadí knih (chronologicky)






In 1997 it seemed that things in the City could only get better. For ten years everything went according to plan. Buoyed by a strong pound and cheered on by an excitable media, the bankers became the heroes of the age. And then in the summer of 2007 everything began to collapse. Barely a year later the City was in tatters. Greed, guile and excess - this definitive insider's account charts an intoxicated decade and cogently reveals just how, and why, the City got it so badly wrong.
Chasing Alpha
- 259 stránek
- 10 hodin čtení
The definitive insider’s history of Britain’s financial services sector from the early days of New Labour to the present. Augar uses his connections with the people and firms that made it happen to give a compelling version of how the City’s golden generation turned London around.
The Death of Gentlemanly Capitalism
The Rise and Fall of London's Investment Banks
- 416 stránek
- 15 hodin čtení
A revolution took place in the City in the 80s and 90s. The cosy club of British merchant banking collapsed in a series of sell-outs, closures and scandals. This left the City dominated by US and European giants. Was this the inevitable result ofglobalization or did mismanagement play a part? This is the first book to look at how and why the British merchant banks and brokers sold out, and where that leaves us. Augar tells this fascinating story with pace and drama, taking us through the Thatcher years, the crash of 1987, Big Bang, and the aggressive invasion of the American banks. He looks at why the British banks failed to keep pace with the Americans, what this says about the way they were run, and what this means for the future.
The Greed Merchants
- 241 stránek
- 9 hodin čtení
"The Greed Merchants explains how the industry really makes its money, challenging its role in the economy and showing how vested interest sustains Wall Street's oligopoly."--BOOK JACKET.
The Death of Gentlemanly Capitalism
- 416 stránek
- 15 hodin čtení
The first book to look at how and why the British banking industry sold outA revolution took place in the City in the 80s and 90s. The cosy club of British merchant banking collapsed in a series of sell-outs, closures and scandals. This left the City dominated by US and European giants. Was this the inevitable result of globalization, or did mismanagement play a part? This is the first book to look at how and why the British merchant banks and brokers sold out, and where that leaves us. Augar tells this fascinating story with pace and drama, taking us through the Thatcher years, the crash of 1987, Big Bang, and the aggressive invasion of the American banks. He looks at why the British banks failed to keep pace with the Americans, what this says about the way they were run, and what this means for the future.