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"Market quality" is a complex, ambiguous term that means different things to different people. How should it be defined, measured, monitored, and improved? What is the evidence about the current state of our markets? How effective have recent innovations been? How can we better meet investor needs? These are some of the questions that we address in this book, along with a broad range of issues concerning equity market structure, regulation, and the quest for best execution. Throughout, particular attention is given to the perspective of front line participants on the buy-side and sell-side trading desks.
Stock exchanges. --- Speculation. --- Investments. --- Investing --- Investment management --- Portfolio --- Finance --- Disinvestment --- Loans --- Saving and investment --- Speculation --- Bucket-shops --- Commercial corners --- Corners, Commercial --- Gambling --- Commodity exchanges --- Contracts, Aleatory --- Investments --- Stock exchanges --- Bulls and bears --- Equity markets --- Exchanges, Securities --- Exchanges, Stock --- Securities exchanges --- Stock-exchange --- Stock markets --- Capital market --- Efficient market theory
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Money market. Capital market --- Investments --- Speculation --- Capital gains --- 332.6 --- Long-term capital gains --- Profit --- Capital losses --- Bucket-shops --- Commercial corners --- Corners, Commercial --- Finance --- Gambling --- Commodity exchanges --- Contracts, Aleatory --- Stock exchanges --- Investing --- Investment management --- Portfolio --- Disinvestment --- Loans --- Saving and investment --- E-books --- Sociétés d'investissement
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Capital market. --- Speculation. --- Marché financier --- Spéculation --- AA / International- internationaal --- 333.600 --- 15 --- Financiële markten. Kapitaalmarkten (algemeenheden). --- Psychologie. --- Marché financier --- Spéculation --- Capital market --- Speculation --- Bucket-shops --- Commercial corners --- Corners, Commercial --- Finance --- Gambling --- Commodity exchanges --- Contracts, Aleatory --- Investments --- Stock exchanges --- Capital markets --- Market, Capital --- Financial institutions --- Loans --- Money market --- Securities --- Crowding out (Economics) --- Efficient market theory --- Psychologie --- Financiële markten. Kapitaalmarkten (algemeenheden)
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Shortly after most novice traders discover how trading works and begin to realize that they have the potential to make unlimited amounts of money in the financial markets, they start dreaming the near-impossible dream. They fantasize about buying that condo in Boca Raton for their parents or surprising their son with a brand-new car on his 16th birthday. They even begin to imagine themselves opening their own trading firm or milling about the pit of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, lobbying against other professional traders for the perfect entry into a once-in-a-lifetime trade. But then … they watch the markets lurch in wildly unpredictable ways, lose their shirts in a few live trades, and then freeze in their tracks, wondering if they will ever be able to consistently trade in a manner that can even loosely be defined as “profitable.” To be sure, becoming a full-time, professional trader, working at a proprietary trading firm, or managing the trading activity of a hedge fund may sound like the perfect career, but it’s all too easy for beginner traders to overestimate their trading abilities, underestimate the movements of the markets, and find themselves in a financial hole of epic proportions after a few bad trades. So what does it really take to make a living in the markets? Tim Bourquin, co-founder of Traders Expo and the Forex Trading Expo and founder of TraderInterviews.com, and freelance writer and editor Nick Mango set out to answer that exact question in Traders at Work, a unique collection of over 20 interviews with some of the world’s most successful professional traders, from at-home hobbyists who have opened their own firms to those working at hedge funds, on proprietary trading desks, and in exchange pits. What mistakes did Anne-Marie Baiynd make early in her career? What does Michael Toma wish he had known about trading? What trading strategies work best for Linda Raschke? How does John Carter remain cool, calm, and collected when the markets are sending mixed signals? And how did Todd Gordon make the transition from part-time to full-time trader? Bourquin and Mango ask all of these questions and more in Traders at Work and in doing so reveal insider insights on what it takes to be a successful trader from those who are living that dream. Fascinating, compelling, and filled with never-before-told stories from the front lines of the trading arena, Traders at Work is required reading for anyone who has ever asked themselves if they have what it takes to trade for a living. .
Investment analysis. --- Speculation. --- Commerce --- Management --- Finance --- Business & Economics --- Local Commerce --- Management Theory --- Investment & Speculation --- Bucket-shops --- Commercial corners --- Corners, Commercial --- Analysis of investments --- Analysis of securities --- Security analysis --- Business. --- Management science. --- Business and Management. --- Business and Management, general. --- Quantitative business analysis --- Problem solving --- Operations research --- Statistical decision --- Trade --- Economics --- Industrial management --- Gambling --- Commodity exchanges --- Contracts, Aleatory --- Investments --- Stock exchanges
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What are the roots of the present economic crisis? The book shows that the factors commonly mentioned (e. g. subprime loans, fall in housing prices) have occurred in the past and therefore cannot account for the severity of the present crisis. There must be "something else". The analysis shows that there was a "phase transition" in the United States around 1975 which brought the following changes: - The stagnation of real wages over the past 30 years and a parallel rise in indebtment levels. - The abrupt fall in unionization rates and in the number of strikes. - The development of tax havens which deprived states of tax revenue. - The globalization of financial transactions which hinders long-term investment.
Speculation. --- Stock price forecasting. --- Stock price forecasting --- Speculation --- Banking --- Finance - General --- Investment & Speculation --- Finance --- Business & Economics --- Forecasting, Stock price --- Security price forecasting --- Stocks --- Bucket-shops --- Commercial corners --- Corners, Commercial --- Prices --- Forecasting --- Finance. --- Economics, Mathematical. --- Combinatorics. --- Statistical physics. --- Dynamical systems. --- Finance, general. --- Quantitative Finance. --- Statistical Physics, Dynamical Systems and Complexity. --- Gambling --- Commodity exchanges --- Contracts, Aleatory --- Investments --- Stock exchanges --- Business forecasting
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Arbitrage. --- Hedging (Finance) --- Speculation. --- investeringen, internationaal --- mathematische modellen, toegepast op economie --- risk management --- wisselkoersen --- Options (Finance) --- Speculation --- Financial futures --- Bucket-shops --- Commercial corners --- Corners, Commercial --- Finance --- Gambling --- Commodity exchanges --- Contracts, Aleatory --- Investments --- Stock exchanges --- Arbitrage --- Securities --- Law and legislation --- Hedging (Finance).
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Money market. Capital market --- Bucket-shops --- Contracts, Aleatory --- International finance --- Speculation --- 336.767 --- Commercial corners --- Corners, Commercial --- Finance --- Gambling --- Commodity exchanges --- Investments --- Stock exchanges --- 336.767 Investering. Belegging. Portfolio. Portfoliotheorie. --(toepassing voor kapitaalkosten in de onderneming zie {658.15}) --- Investering. Belegging. Portfolio. Portfoliotheorie. --(toepassing voor kapitaalkosten in de onderneming zie {658.15}) --- International monetary system --- International money --- International economic relations --- International finance. --- Speculation.
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AA / International- internationaal --- 333.633 --- Securities --- 657.6 --- Investments --- Speculation --- -332.632 --- Bucket-shops --- Commercial corners --- Corners, Commercial --- Finance --- Gambling --- Commodity exchanges --- Contracts, Aleatory --- Stock exchanges --- Investing --- Investment management --- Portfolio --- Disinvestment --- Loans --- Saving and investment --- Blue sky laws --- Capitalization (Finance) --- Investment securities --- Scrip --- Securities law --- Underwriting --- Investment banking --- Aandelen. --- Automatisatie van de boekhouding. --- Law and legislation --- Aandelen --- Automatisatie van de boekhouding --- -Securities --- Securities -
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Die aktuelle Debatte über stark steigende Grundstückspreise und Mieten findet in dieser Untersuchung ihr historisches Fundament: Das Buch zeigt, wie intensiv in der Bundesrepublik bereits nach 1960 über das gleiche Problem gestritten wurde. Als Schuldige galten profitgierige "Spekulanten", denen unmoralische Geschäftsmethoden vorgeworfen wurden. Anhand zahlreicher Fallbeispiele - aus Frankfurt am Main, München, Hamburg, Köln und West-Berlin - untersucht Karl Christian Führer sowohl das konkrete Geschehen auf den Märkten für Grundstücke und Wohnraum als auch die zahlreichen Proteste gegen die "Spekulation" mit Immobilien, etwa durch Hausbesetzungen, bis 1985. Er verzichtet dabei auf vorschnelle Urteile und analysiert die Prozesse konsequent im Kontext der bundesdeutschen Gesellschafts- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte. Ein zentral wichtiger Aspekt der jüngeren Vergangenheit wird damit auf innovative Weise differenziert dargestellt, denn Grundstücke und Wohnungen sind wohl das Wirtschaftsgut, an dem sich die soziale und kulturelle Dimension ökonomischen Handelns besonders eindringlich nachweisen lässt. Der moralisierende Begriff der "Spekulation" hilft wenig, wenn man Veränderungen auf diesem Markt verstehen will. In West Germany profit-hungry speculators were blamed for rising real estate prices and rental costs. Karl Christian Führer analyzes events in the real estate markets in major cities such as Frankfurt, Munich, Hamburg, Cologne, and West Berlin and the heated debate about speculation before 1985. He shatters popular notions while offering salient new data for an informed discussion about freedom and regulation in the housing market.
Real property --- Real estate investment --- Speculation --- History --- Bucket-shops --- Commercial corners --- Corners, Commercial --- Finance --- Gambling --- Commodity exchanges --- Contracts, Aleatory --- Investments --- Stock exchanges --- Investment in real estate --- Real property investment --- Land speculation --- Real estate business --- Cadastral surveys --- Catastral surveys --- Freehold --- Limitations (Law) --- Property, Real --- Real estate --- Real estate law --- Realty --- Property --- Rent --- Law and legislation --- Guest workers. --- real estate speculation. --- rental law. --- social protest. --- squatters.
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First Published in 2014. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
Commodity futures --- Speculation --- Commodity exchanges --- Bucket-shops --- Commercial corners --- Corners, Commercial --- Finance --- Gambling --- Contracts, Aleatory --- Investments --- Stock exchanges --- Commodities futures --- Commodity futures contracts --- Commodity futures trading --- Futures, Commodity --- Futures --- Commodities exchange --- Commodity markets --- Exchanges, Commodity --- Exchanges, Produce --- Produce exchanges --- Futures market --- Commercial products --- Produce trade --- Law and legislation --- History --- E-books