1. Collaterized Mortgage Obligations grew to $1 trillion by 1993, 500 times the size of the Junk Bond melt down, valued at $22 billion and in 1994-96, the CMO market crashed. 2. The second most important financial instrument over the past half century has been the residential mortgage. In 1996, the outstanding value of residential mortgage was about $3.8 trillion. If fund manager fear getting stuck with illiquid investments,...
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Mr. Morris book provides a very readable survey of financial crisis which occured during the last 150 years. The real value of this book lies Mr. Morris's commentary which draws into focus the fundamental similarities between seemingly unrelated financial disasters. It is banal to observe that the future is likely to include some as-yet unforseen financial meltdown. Armegeddon-peddlers, chicken-littlers, and perpetual bears...
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An excellent book for the serious investor who wants historical perspective on the market changes happening today. It's added gift is that it will imbue its reader with the knowledge to preserve wealth and actually profit whenever the next financial crisis comes, since the author proves that there is not much new in modern crises, and their prescriptions, that couldn't be found in crises a hundred years ago. The author...
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I found myself continuously amazed at the insights that Morris shows in his analysis of US financial markets and in their basic similarity over 150 years -- similar but more complex. I have been a student of financial markets for over forty years and I confess that I found insights being expanded consistently. As I read I kept thinking "What a great critical summary!"
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