market-economics


Related Subjects: Financial Book Review market-stock marketin marketing-industry markets markting maryland-economics mathematics-for-economists mb-financial mbna meat-industry medical-economics medical-economics-company medical-stock mellon-financial mellon-investments merger mergers mergers-and-acquisitions merrill-lynch-investments metastock metlife-investments metrics metropolitan-west mfg mfs micro-economics microeconomic midwest-financial mining-industry mintel modelling
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Book reviews for "market-economics" sorted by average review score:

Pricing Money: A Beginner's Guide to Money, Bonds, Futures and Swaps
Published in Paperback by John Wiley & Sons (12 November, 2001)
Author: J. D. A. Wiseman
Amazon base price: $39.95
Used price: $22.77
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Average review score:

A readable and thorough introduction to fixed income markets
Extremely readable. One could read this book in a single sitting and get a great jumpstart to an understanding of fixed income markets - the why and the how.

Wiseman has an engaging style of writing which prevents the stifled yawns normally associated with reading this genre, and keeps one turning the pages...

The book nicely covers the fundamental theory of why there exists a fixed income market, then turns to the players and discusses what they do, and finally covers some of the fundamental trading strategies and math employed to turn a buck.

Nice one...

i could not put this book down
i found this book very well written. It provides detail and yet covers that what it says it does. I find that Wiseman explains concepts in a verystraight forward way. Although i had to pause to eat and think about some of the financial products discussed such as "par yields". I found I was able to understand the book. The book contains some of the trader jargon and a outline of the players involved in the market. I think that anyone who wants to something with securities or trading should read this, before/during/after an intership. As the english say "Wiseman" is the dogs ballocks!! get this book!


Profits in the Stock Market/With Charts
Published in Hardcover by Lambert Gann Publishing (May, 1935)
Author: H.M. Gartley
Amazon base price: $120.00
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Average review score:

Mandatory Classic
This is one of the best books I have ever read about technical analysis. Although the charts aren't what you would call 'contemporary' (the 30s and back) the wisdom in it still lives today.

It's a Complete Course, which used to be sold by chapters, but now, bound in a single book you'll be able to read all there is to it. The law of supply and demand hasn't changed that much ever since, just the participants in the markets.

With all the knowledge within the book you'll get a series of accompaning charts to help you in your study that show in a nostalgic, although informative way, how to build a trend following system. The trading style devised will be greatly appreciated by everyone who knows the virtues of patience on trading - waiting for the ideal timing with high probability of sucess.

Buy this one and you're trading is almost guaranteed to improve.

Outstanding little talked about timeless classic
Outstanding survey of technical analysis. Core principles are as applicable today as when originally written. Book brought back by Lambert-Gann publishing of Pomeroy, WA.


Psychology of the Stock Market
Published in Paperback by Fraser Publishing Co. (01 June, 1995)
Authors: G. C. Selden and James L. Fraser
Amazon base price: $10.95
Average review score:

amazing book
This little book of 100 pages is the most densely packed set of wisdom on markets I have ever read.

Absolute finest book on market psychology I have ever read.

Best 10 bucks I ever spent
Several psychological pitfalls for the speculator to be wary of are covered, along with an excellent model of how buying and selling work from an emotional perspective. I've spent 50 bucks on several market psychology books that don't measure up to this little 90 year old paperback .


The Random Walk and Beyond: An Inside Guide to the Stock Market
Published in Hardcover by John Wiley & Sons (27 January, 1988)
Author: Mark A. Johnson
Amazon base price: $22.95
Used price: $8.40
Collectible price: $20.12
Average review score:

Great book! Publisher should reprint.
I first found this book at my local library and found it to be one of the best books on investments that I'd read. Since then I've tried to find it for sale here and elsewhere, but have not been able to locate a copy. I hope the publisher will reprint this book someday (even better if they'd update and print a 2nd edition) before I steal the one from the library (I'm joking; but I would like to have a copy of the book).

Best book I've read on investing
The SEC should make this required reading for anyone who wants to invest in the stock market. Johnson clarifies what is important and what is not in investing. Even after he shows you how you CAN beat the market, he makes you think about whether you really NEED to beat the market. Much more meaningful than Lynch's pablum.


Riding the Millennial Storm: Marc Faber's Path to Profit in the Financial Markets
Published in Hardcover by John Wiley & Sons (November, 1998)
Authors: Nury Vittachi and Marc Faber
Amazon base price: $27.97
List price: $39.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $149.95
Collectible price: $179.95
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Average review score:

A rarity in the investment world!
Mr.Faber doesn't pander to the masses. He tells them like it is and not how it should be. He has been very successful with his approach and I was impressed by this book.

just excellent
Great market insights and original investing thoughts from an author withlong experience and deep convictions. If you want to hear ideas other than from the thundering herd, this book is for you.


Riding the Storm: Strategic Planning in Turbulent Markets
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill Trade (April, 2002)
Author: Gerald Michaluk
Amazon base price: $34.95
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Average review score:

Extremely Useful Set of Ideas!
This is an extremely readable and well-written book. I am not exactly a marketing buff but I could follow the concepts and ideas presented in the book without any difficuty at all. The book is full of interesting anecdotes and live case studies from leading organisations around the world. I am sure most companies could gain tremendously if they adopted even some of the ideas presented in this book. And, the good thing is that it's presented in such a modular fashion that Mr. Michaluk's system could be implemented in single modules at a time.

So obvious why do we not do it?
This book outlines why planning currently fails and how to make it work. It explains the concept of real-time right time. It simply makes plannning work. It places the points are so clear I can't understand why we were not doing what this book recommends. Its simply one of the best books I have read on the subject of strategic planning. I don't think he is quite Scotland's "Porter" but he sure makes it clear what we should be doing.


The Rule of Three: Surviving and Thriving in Competitive Markets
Published in Hardcover by Free Press (January, 2002)
Authors: Jagdish Sheth and Rajendra Sisodia
Amazon base price: $5.99
List price: $28.00 (that's 79% off!)
Used price: $18.95
The Rule of Three, by Jagdish Sheth and Rajendra Sisodia, offers an innovative take on corporate development that could help leaders put their own operations into a new context that improves competitive strategies and boosts market performance. Sheth and Sisodia, consultants and marketing professors, base it on their contention that just three major players ultimately emerge in all markets--such as ExxonMobil, Texaco, and Chevron in petroleum, and Gerber, Beech-Nut, and Heinz in baby foods. These giant "full-line generalists" are eventually surrounded by smaller "specialists" who successfully concentrate on niche products (such as high-end audio gear) or niche markets (like fashions for professional women), along with midsized "ditch-dwellers" who struggle to reach an audience in between (like second-tier airlines that compete with goliaths on price and regionals on service). The authors examine this pattern of market evolution and the "radical disruption" that can occur when technology or regulation changes or a new entry "succeeds in altering the rules" (as Starbucks did by sneaking up on coffee's Big Three). Appendices present helpful examples of the way this has shaken out in various industries. --Howard Rothman
Average review score:

Incredible Book for Making Strategic Decisions
This book increases my ability to weigh my competitors in my industry and give me better tools to position my company against my competitors... Read it you will find it interesting or your company in a big ditch...

The best tool to predict a company's future in this economy.
The future looks very uncertain to all of us - no matter what company we are in: big or small, none of us has been spared from this mass anxiety that started in 2001. The old saying 'what goes up must come down' became true after 10 years of the best boom time in America. But will 'things have to eventually turn around' come true? Of course it will, but it would seem that in the process a lot of companies will not survive (as has already been witnessed in the last 2 years). So rather than worrying about when things will turn around, it may be more prudent to focus on figuring out which companies will survive these extremely difficult and trying times.

The book is very deep and I am still in the process of digesting all the material. But I was so moved by the very powerful and sound theory presented in the book that I wanted to share my views immediately and hence this review. So bear with me as the terms I use aren't exactly the ones used in the book. I am using them to help me communicate these ideas faster and more effectively.

This book offers some incredible insight into the fundamental way in which businesses and consumer markets interact. And in the process it provides vital clues that could be used to assess what companies will survive. There are only 8 chapters in this book and a conclusion along with 3 appendices. The first chapter gives some preliminary information on the mechanisms by which consumer markets in free market economies force efficiency increases in the businesses involved. The second chapter addresses the fundamental Rule of Three and why eventually after the dust settles, there can only be three left in an industry - no more and no less.

Chapter 3 broadly categorizes all companies into either Specialists or Generalists and futher defines them into five groups - Full-line Generalists, Portfolio Generalists, Product Specialists, Market Specialists, and Super Nichers. This chapter is especially important as it describes in great detail several of the primary chateristics of both Generalists and Specialists. This is important because it later ties into the successful strategies that must be adopted in order to survive difficult economic times. Chapter 4 shows how companies can get in serious trouble and eventually not survive the difficult times. The authors call this 'The Ditch'.

I wasn't too interested in Chapter 5 which addresses Globalization and the Rule of Three. I still forced myself to read this chapter as I didn't want to miss anything that is used in later chapters. But Chapter 6 and 7 are the ones that everyone has to read! This is where all the secrets lie - the successful strategies one must follow in order to survive this all powerful Rule of Three. Chapter 6 is relevant to the Generalist companies and Chapter 7 is for Specialist companies.

Finally, Chapter 8 introduces the subject of market disruptions - simply speaking how some discontinuous changes in the marketplace (new technologies that can do the same things faster, better, and cheaper - like the Internet) can put someone at immediate risk of failing due to the enormous investment they may already have in terms of time and money in the old technologies.

The authors' conclusion follows these 8 chapters. This is again extremely important as it contains 22 general rules (just a few lines each) that you can't ignore if you are trying to predict where your company future lies. The appendices contain some very good research. For example - the three survivors in all the major industries across the world. As can be expected of a book written by two Ph.D's, there is a very complete reference section at the end of the book where you can check and verify the source data.

There are so many aspects to making a business successful and there are so many books out there on the subject that it is easy to overlook such a critical book as this one. I was fortunate enough to run into this book as a result of my frenzied After Christmas bargain shopping at Amazon where I RANDOMLY selected 30-40 books that were all priced at just a few dollars thinking I can't go wrong even if I find one good book out of three (since the bargain price was a third of the original price). After that it sat on my bookshelf till I recently decided to skim through a few pages of the book. That's when it struck me that this is a landmark book and absolutely essential in predicting the future. I immediately put this book at the top of my reading list and have been devouring it ever since. I consider myself very lucky to find this treasure map of a book. Well, it would be a treasure map only if you are trying to figure out which company is going to survive. Otherwise, you can conveniently skip this book.

Strategic Hypotheses from an Industry Structure Perspective
This book deserves more than five stars.

The Rule of Three is well-documented, easy to read and understand, is filled with practical advice that can be used for many strategic purposes. Regardless of your industry, the size of your business, and your ambitions, you will be well rewarded by the time you spend with this book. It will provide a useful perspective of the sort that you probably have gained from books like The Innovator's Dilemma, The Discipline of Market Leaders, and The New Market Leaders.

For a quick overview of the book, I suggest you begin by reading the clear summary of key points on pages 200-202.

The idea that most industries will eventually be dominated by three broad-scale suppliers with a few profitable specialists was one I first heard from Bruce Henderson, CEO of The Boston Consulting Group, about 1972. My quick look around at the time showed that this pattern did frequently occur (domestic autos, breakfast cereal, and beer came to mind then). This industry structure is more often present now than it was then due to the massive consolidations through acquisitions and business failures that have happened in the United States and world wide. Since learning about the empirical observation, I have usually seen the point applied to the questions of how a market leader could most effectively put pressure on the third largest company in the industry and vice versa. The Rule of Three goes well beyond that scope.

As a result, I was delighted to see that the authors of this fine book have provided extensive empirical documentation of their observations by listing many different industries where this structure occurred, case examples from dozens of old and new industries, and definitions of what can trigger this development. Of particular value to readers will be the detailed descriptions of the strategies that are most likely to succeed and fail, and the most frequent causes of those outcomes.

The detailed observations were usually spot on. I only detected a few places where I disagreed with points that were made. For example, EMC was listed in an appendix as being in the computer peripheral industry along with companies that mostly make PC peripherals. I see EMC as mainly competing instead with the likes of IBM, Hewlett-Packard, Fujitsu, Dell and Storage Networks. The authors also argue that the large general competitors usually enjoy a stock-price multiple over the specialist, niche players who have high returns. I would argue that it is usually just the opposite.

I thought that the problem of the #4, #5, #6 and so forth general suppliers was well described as falling into "the ditch" where the lowest returns on assets are earned. These companies lack the benefits of being a specialist and the scale of being a leader. Often, they succumb. If they can merge to become or join a top company, then the situation may change.

I was pleased to see that the authors described how a company may "change the rules" citing how Starbucks has made progress against the traditional coffee suppliers (Maxwell House, Folger's, and Nestle) by providing more accessible, better quality coffee at a higher price. The main opportunity to strengthen the book would have been to discuss this point with more examples and in more detail.

I also enjoyed the discussion of how specialist companies can be lured into chasing unprofitable market share, and falling by the wayside as a result.

Many authors with an empirical theory like this one would try to avoid talking about situations where one company has almost all the market share (such as occurs in personal computer software), or two companies get almost all the business (as in commercial airframe manufacturers), or even four (as often occurs in Europe and Japan). The authors actually strengthened their main point by examining those exceptions to their rule, and showing the influences that made these results occur.

As someone who is interested in uncontrollable forces that can influence industry structure, I thought that the focus here was good although much simpler than the detailed lists that Professor Michael Porter provides.

Having understood these points, I encourage you to think through how you could use these forces against the current market leaders. As the book suggests, the leaders' efficiencies and size make them vulnerable to nimble competitors offering new business models that serve customers and stakeholders in more ways than by lowering costs. Like the cataclysmic event that killed off the dinosaurs, new business models can doom the existing leaders to being poorly fit for the new environment.

Look for the ultimate competitive advantage!


Selling to Newly Emerging Markets
Published in Hardcover by Quorum Books (30 April, 1998)
Author: Russell R. Miller
Amazon base price: $96.95
Buy one from zShops for: $56.00
Average review score:

An outstanding resource for new exporters to NEM's.
This is a book written by a highly experienced international marketer who truly understands the characteristic of the newly independent states of the Soviet Union and other developing Eastern European countries. It clearly instructs readers how to how to build sucessful sales networks and create lasting local business relationships. Our consulting staff refers to this book often when putting together marketing programs for clients who want to penetrate BEM's as quickly and profitably as possible. John R. Jagoe, Director, Export Institute.

Informative, Interesting, and Practical!
As the Director of Training Development for an American based international company, I found this book to be extremely informative, very practical, as well as an interesting read. An unusal combination to find in business books. Miller obviously knows his subject and is able to convey his valuable information in a very readable manner.


The Shah's Silk for Europe's Silver
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Peeters (01 January, 1999)
Author: Ina Baghdiantz McCabe
Amazon base price: $50.00
Average review score:

Reviw
I found this book to be an excellent analysis of the a part of the Iranian economy during the Safavi period. Although it is slanted toward the Armenian minority and does not cover the whole economy, it provides a unique and preceptive view of a section of the economy that has been ignored. Aside from bringing to light the power of the Armenian minority in a hypothetically theocratic state, it will change the reader's preception of the economic, political and social sophistication of Iran and, in fact, the Middle East at the time of European expansion. The book is very well written and the analysis excellent. The absence of tables in the discussion of the volume of exports as given in different sources and and conversions of currency is sorely missed. Such tables would have made it considerably easier to compare the various references. However, this is minor in the general context of the book.

Excellent window onto early Asian/European trade
A detailed and fascinating study of international trade and Safavid politics in the seventeenth century. I found it to be extremely well researched, drawing together evidence from Armenian and Persian documents, as well as European archival collections. The book chiefly focuses on the Armenian merchants who managed the export of silk from Iran to Europe, and the import of European silver back to Iran and India. It successfully demonstrates the crucial financial role these merchants played in the consolidation of the Safavid state in Iran, with comparisons to other outsiders financing the formation of absolutist states in Europe.


Short Selling (Wall Street & the Security Market Series)
Published in Hardcover by Arno Pr (August, 1975)
Author: James E. Meeker
Amazon base price: $25.95
Average review score:

Good guide for risk takers.
Since I am a French woman who flies her plane, you can believe that I will take some risks. But the French are very careful with their money, so to learn these strategies of short-selling, a French woman, like me, must be guided along the way. This book is the way to find out about these important things to do with some of your moneys. I am very fortunate to know about these things better from this book.

One of the Very Best
Short selling is an unorthodox, high risk investment strategy. But it also offers some of the highest potential for profits and hedge protection in bear markets. Unfortunately, there is too little information available to investors on short selling techniques.

I am fortunate enough to have read this excellent book. Although it is not the most up to date, the fundamentals of the market are still the same. I most highly recommend this book and the Art of Short Selling for anyone interested in this dynamic investment opportunity.


Related Subjects: Financial Book Review market-stock marketin marketing-industry markets markting maryland-economics mathematics-for-economists mb-financial mbna meat-industry medical-economics medical-economics-company medical-stock mellon-financial mellon-investments merger mergers mergers-and-acquisitions merrill-lynch-investments metastock metlife-investments metrics metropolitan-west mfg mfs micro-economics microeconomic midwest-financial mining-industry mintel modelling
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