Wall Street Meat

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出版者:Collins
作者:Andy Kessler
出品人:
页数:272
译者:
出版时间:2004-1-6
价格:$13.95
装帧:Paperback
isbn号码:9780060592141
丛书系列:
图书标签:
  • 金融
  • 华尔街
  • WallStreet
  • Research
  • Finance
  • 商业史
  • 分析师
  • 英文
  • 金融
  • 华尔街
  • 犯罪
  • 内幕
  • 投资
  • 欺诈
  • 权力
  • 金钱
  • 美国
  • 商业
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具体描述

From Publishers Weekly

When Kessler interviewed for an analyst's position at Paine Webber in 1986, he wasn't even sure what the job entailed, but would soon learn there were "absolutely no qualifications whatsoever" for the responsibility of telling investors how to build their stock portfolios. He did happen to meet the right people, however: he palled around with Jack Grubman and then, at a subsequent job at Morgan Stanley, worked with Frank Quattrone and Mary Meeker-three analysts who later acquired varying levels of fame and notoriety during the boom-and-bust market of the late 1990s, as they were accused of deliberately recommending stocks from tech companies they knew to be overvalued. Henry Blodget was also implicated in the ensuing scandal, but despite his prominence on the cover, he has no substantial presence in this story, just a few cameos well after Kessler left Wall Street to run an investment firm in California. The subtitular implication that Wall Street "chewed up" these figures is also misleading; the men were at the top of their game when they were forced out, while Meeker has at this writing suffered nothing more than slight damage to her reputation. Kessler's denigration of her as a "clueless" rookie who became a technology "cheerleader" risks overstating the case against her as a means of pumping up the reputation of otherwise "pure analysts." False modesty and clunky dialogue do little to enhance a story that relies too heavily on Kessler's former proximity to now-famous people, while his analysis of their legal woes rarely advances beyond the superficial. Readers seeking insight into the blurring of the boundaries between investment bankers and stock analysts should wait for a book that tells that story directly, with a fuller perspective.

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Michael Lewis, author of Liar's Poker, The New New Thing

A deliciously naughty new book... I finished it in a gulp, perfectly astonished." --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Rich Karlgaard, Publisher, Forbes Magazine, March 2003

This book is gripping, like watching the Zapruder film versus reading the Warren report, I couldn't put it down. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

CBS Marketwatch, Bambi Francisco

A fun read. Andy Kessler makes use of his pen, wit and cynical outlook. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

CNBC, James Cramer, Kudlow & Cramer

This book is a hoot. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Robert Teitelman, The Daily Deal, April 4, 2003

Now arrives a fascinating little testimony from Andy Kessler...breezy, Wall Street-y style. He can be quite funny. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Bambi Francisco, CBS MarketWatch, March 11, 2003

It's funny and brings characters to life. Andy Kessler makes use of his pen, wit and cynical outlook. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

FierceFinance April 23, 2003

"Fascinating book full of biting humor and cynicism that's informed by firsthand experiences in a crazy industry." --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Adam Lashinsky, Fortune - CNN/Money April 23, 2003

"A scathing critique of everything wrong with Wall Street ... and what's wrong with a few of the critics as well. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Description

Wall Street is a funny business. All you have is your reputation. Taint it and someone else will fill your shoes. Longevity comes from maintaining that reputation.

Ask Jack Grubman, the All-Star telecom analyst from Salomon Smith Barney; uber-banker Frank Quattrone at CS First Boston; Morgan Stanley's Mary "Queen of the Net" Meeker; or Merrill Lynch's Henry Blodget.

Well, they probably won't tell you anything. But have I got some great stories for you.

Successful hedge fund manager Andy Kessler looks back on his years as an analyst on Wall Street and offers this cautionary tale of the intoxicating forces loose in the world of finance that overwhelmed sober analysis.

From the Author

Wall Street is a funny business. All you have is your reputation. Taint it and someone else will fill your shoes. Longevity comes from maintaining that reputation.

Ask Jack Grubman, the All-Star telecom analyst from Salomon Smith Barney stuck recommending the Worldcom and Global Crossing disasters. Or uber-banker Frank Quattrone, who did a few too many skanky IPOs at CS First Boston. Or Morgan Stanley’s Mary "Queen of the Net" Meeker. Or Henry Blodget, whose $400 price target on Amazon.com’s stock got him a job at Merrill Lynch.

They probably won’t tell you anything. But I will. I sat next to Jack Grubman when we both started at Paine Webber. Later at Morgan Stanley, I did deals with Frank Quattrone and was a mentor to Mary Meeker. During the heat of the Internet bubble, I befriended Henry Blodget. Have I got some great stories for you.

Add to these four folks the strategists and axes, barking dogs and Piranhas, ducks and momos, Vomit Comets and Joe Six-Stock, and you’ll get a clear picture of how Wall Street works and how analysts and bankers went from merely being famous to become notorious.

We really were just pieces of Wall Street Meat. The Street is a disgustingly lucrative capital-raising machine -- its players keep half of the revenues they generate. The tales of Jack, Frankie, Mary, Henry and all the rest of us are important, if only to show how powerful and then how fickle Wall Street can be. Creeping hubris is terminal. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

作者简介

After turning $100 million into $1 billion riding the technology wave of the late 1990s, Andy Kessler recounted his experiences on Wall Street and in the trenches of the hedge fund industry in the books Wall Street Meat and Running Money (and its companion volume, How We Got Here). Though he has retired from actively managing other people's money, he remains a passionate and curious investor. Unable to keep his many opinions to himself, he contributes to the Wall Street Journal, Wired, and lots of Web sites on a variety of Wall Street and technology-related topics, and is often seen on CNBC, FOX, and CNN. He lives in Silicon Valley like all the other tech guys.

目录信息

读后感

评分

这本书看的还是很快的,大概看了3天吧,不到,就看完了。没有什么难以理解的东西。说实话,我个人觉得这本书不怎么样,讲的是关于分析师在顶尖投行做的事情。当然了,作者对投行的价值观的转化做了批判。这点在看了几本书后读者们应该都已经意识到了吧。可笑了些。投行...  

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像读小说一样轻松,了解华尔街的重重内幕,读过之后感觉到那些金融巨头的当下遭遇的危机其实早已是诱因深种了。此时此刻重温这本书很有意义。

评分

“我只是股市绞肉机里一块肉”尽管跻身华尔街“全明星”分析师队列,身为美国盈利第四的对冲基金管理人,安迪.凯斯勒却如是评价自己的华尔街经历。从贝尔软件工程师到潘恩.韦伯投资公司的投资分析师,再从业内排名第二的金牌投资分析师到摩根士丹利,安迪.凯斯勒见证了科技股的...  

评分

“我只是股市绞肉机里一块肉”尽管跻身华尔街“全明星”分析师队列,身为美国盈利第四的对冲基金管理人,安迪.凯斯勒却如是评价自己的华尔街经历。从贝尔软件工程师到潘恩.韦伯投资公司的投资分析师,再从业内排名第二的金牌投资分析师到摩根士丹利,安迪.凯斯勒见证了科技股的...  

评分

《操纵金钱》和《华尔街的肉》是安迪凯斯勒一个人写的两本书,主题是高科技证券,前者偏高科技多一些,后者偏金融多一些。 安迪.凯斯勒的出身是一名AT&T的工程师,80年代阴差阳错的进入证券市场。80年代的安迪主要从事IT行业证券分析,也就是我们都耳熟能详的证券分析员。90年...  

用户评价

评分

我阅读此书时,脑海中不断浮现出那种冷峻的、黑白分明的画面感。作者的叙述节奏非常具有电影感,每一个场景的切换都精准到位,信息密度极高,但又不会让人感到窒息。他似乎对“权力真空”和“信息不对称”下的行为逻辑有着近乎病态的痴迷,并将其作为核心驱动力来解剖。这本书的结构非常巧妙,它不是线性的时间叙事,更像是一种螺旋上升的结构,不断回到关键的冲突点,从不同的侧面进行挖掘和剖析。我最欣赏的是作者如何将那些看似枯燥的金融术语,通过生动的比喻和场景描述,转化为具有强烈视觉冲击力的画面。它迫使读者去直面一个事实:在那个顶层世界里,道德规范往往是被重塑甚至被彻底抛弃的工具。读完后,我感觉自己仿佛经历了一场对现代资本主义核心机制的深度体检,虽然过程令人不安,但结论却无比清晰和有力。

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这本书的视角转换令人耳目一新,它完全避开了传统财经书籍的刻板说教腔调。作者似乎对“英雄主义”嗤之以鼻,他描绘的那些华尔街的弄潮儿,没有一个是完美的圣人,他们大多是充满缺陷、被欲望驱动的凡人,只不过他们的舞台设置在了全球金融的中心。我感受最深的是,作者在处理信息时的那种克制和精准,他懂得何时应该放大噪音,何时又应该安静下来,让画面自行说话。比如,书中对某个特定时期的市场情绪的描绘,简直是教科书级别的心理侧写,让你能清晰地感受到那种群体性的亢奋和随后的集体恐慌是如何在人们的神经末梢蔓延开来的。读到那些关键的转折点时,我甚至能听见自己心跳加速的声音,仿佛自己也卷入了那场巨大的资本博弈之中。这种沉浸式的阅读体验,让我对金融行业的“非人化”倾向有了更切实的理解。它成功地将冰冷的数字和炽热的人性,熔铸在了一起。

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这本书的魅力在于它呈现了一种近乎史诗般的宏大叙事,但叙事的主体却常常是那些微不足道的、瞬间即逝的决策。作者的语言风格有一种古老的、几乎是寓言式的力量,用词考究,句式变化多端,读起来充满了文学的美感,完全不像是一本探讨现代商业运作的书籍。我发现自己常常需要放慢速度,去咀嚼那些措辞精妙的段落,思考其背后的多重含义。它成功地建立起了一种疏离感和观察者的视角,让你得以从一个相对安全的距离,审视那些高风险的活动。与其他同类书籍相比,它最大的成功之处在于,它没有将华尔街塑造成一个只有成功学或失败学的二元世界,而是展示了一个充满了灰色地带的生态系统,在这个系统中,运气、智谋、裙带关系和纯粹的残忍,以一种难以名状的比例混合在一起。这本书更像是一部关于权力如何腐蚀心智的现代悲剧。

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这本书简直是金融界的“清流”!我本来以为这又是一本老生常谈的华尔街成功学或者阴谋论,结果完全出乎我的意料。作者的叙事风格极其老辣,仿佛能穿透那些光鲜亮丽的玻璃幕墙,直达心脏地带的残酷现实。他没有过多纠结于那些晦涩难懂的衍生品交易细节,而是聚焦于驱动华尔街运转的那些“人”——那些在巨额数字背后挣扎、贪婪、甚至绝望的个体。我尤其欣赏作者对人性复杂性的描摹,那种在道德边缘徘徊,为了追逐更高的收益而不断试探底线的描写,让人读起来既感到震撼,又隐隐感到一丝共鸣。文字的张力十足,节奏感把握得极好,读起来有种酣畅淋漓的快感,仿佛置身于一场高风险的牌局之中,每一页都充满了不确定的变量和即将到来的风暴。这本书绝非仅仅是关于金钱的游戏,它更像是一部深刻的社会观察,揭示了在资本洪流下,现代精英阶层是如何塑造自身,又是如何被这个系统所吞噬的。读完之后,我对华尔街的理解不再停留在新闻头条的层面,而是多了一层更深沉、更具批判性的认识。

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老实说,这本书的文笔和结构安排,初读时会给人一种强烈的“散文化”印象,但深入阅读后,我才体会到这种看似松散的叙事背后蕴含的巨大野心。它像一部交响乐,由许多看似不相干的小主题(可能是某次并购的侧面记录,或是某个交易员童年的片段)构成,但最终所有旋律都汇聚成一个宏大而悲怆的主题。我特别喜欢作者在描述那些华尔街内部会议和非正式聚会时的笔触,那些对话的张力,空气中弥漫着的酒精和野心的味道,都被捕捉得极其精准。它没有给出任何简单的答案,反而抛出了一堆更尖锐的问题:效率与公平的界限究竟在哪里?个人良知在面对集体逐利行为时,到底能抵抗多久?对于我这种非科班出身的读者来说,阅读过程既充满挑战,又极其过瘾。它迫使你不断地进行思考和联想,而不是被动地接受信息。这本书的价值,不在于教你如何赚钱,而在于让你明白,赚钱的底层逻辑,往往比你想象的更加黑暗和复杂。

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在华尔街工作不就为了赚钱吗?

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另外一個TMT的基金經理,非常生動寫實的了解分析員生活的書。

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我又看了一遍英文 作为地铁读物实在太棒了 都是梗! 能黑人! 过两天我千万嘚找个机会去黑东京研究部主任这事、、

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mary meeker竟然跳槽了

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在华尔街工作不就为了赚钱吗?

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