Monday, April 11, 2016

The Death of Corporate Reputation: How Integrity Has Been Destroyed on Wall Street (Applied Corporate Finance) by Jonathan Macey *Popular Books »PDF

The Death of Corporate Reputation: How Integrity Has Been Destroyed on Wall Street (Applied Corporate Finance)   They treated customers well and sometimes endured losses in transactions or business deals in order to sustain and nurture their reputations as faithful br


Book Online

The Death of Corporate Reputation: How Integrity Has Been Destroyed on Wall Street (Applied Corporate Finance)

Title:The Death of Corporate Reputation: How Integrity Has Been Destroyed on Wall Street (Applied Corporate Finance)
Author:Jonathan Macey
Rating:4.72 (170 Votes)
Asin:0133039706
Format Type:Hardcover
Number of Pages:304 Pages
Publish Date:2013-03-23
Genre:

Why did the financial scandals really happen? Why are they continuing to happen? In The Death of Corporate Reputation, Yale's Jonathan Macey reveals the real, non-intuitive reason, and offers a new path forward. For over a century law firms, investment banks, accounting firms, credit rating agencies and companies seeking regular access to U.S. capital markets made large investments in their reputations.  They treated customers well and sometimes endured losses in transactions or business deals in order to sustain and nurture their reputations as faithful brokers and “gate-keepers.”  This has changed completely. The existing business model among leading participants in today’s capital markets no longer treats customers as valued clients whose trust must be earned and nurtured, but as one-off “counter-parties” to whom no duties are owed and no loyalty is required

Editorial : From the Back Cover “a brilliant, provocative, and persuasive exploration of a root cause of the failure of modern financial market regulation, engendered by lawmakers, regulators and prosecutors, and their legal and accounting acolytes. A must-read for anyone concerned about the health and well-being of our capital and financial markets.”--Harvey Pitt, CEO of global business consultancy Kalorama Partners, formerly 26th Chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (2001-2003)

  • The real reasons why we can no longer trust Wall Street and what to do about it
  • How the SEC got captured--and why it’s perfectly happy about that
  • Essential reading for every policymaker, financial executive, investor, and citizen concerned with well-functioning capital markets
Trust and reputation are central to the operation of capital markets. But in our generation, reputational mechanisms are failing, and when these fail, markets and societies

By His stripes you WERE healed! ~ 1 Peter 2:24. The bestseller Moneyball should be read in conjunction with this book for two reasons. Dean's book.

If you focus exclusively on Dean's occasional sociopolitical comments, you'll miss the real value of the book: its wealth of practical information designed to jump-start a (perhaps tragically stalled) life, via the aptly-named "Life Amplification" methods he describes. They seem to run their own fiefdoms without regard to the consequences and it's scary stuff!. LOVERMAN as a stage play. It is HER story, well-written, and this is exactly what makes it so hard to put down. The area of this place in Hackney, London seemed like a place that was describe so very well making you think you were there while you are reading the novel. I actually got a chance to meet her once after a lecture she gave to a Masters Level addiction class. She is funny, a feminist, and self effacing. It sits alongside my Stumm and Morgan (Aquatic Chemistry) as

No comments:

Post a Comment