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May17
The Wall Street MBA: Your Personal Crash Course in Corporate Finance
Filed under: Personal Finance; Tagged as: Amusing Anecdotes, corporate, Corporate America, Corporate Finance, Course, Crash, Crash Course, Earnings, Exercises, Finance, Finance Product, Financial Statements, Financial Valuation, Interactive Resource, Mba Course, Mergers And Acquisitions, Novice, personal, Personal Finance, Stock Prices, street, Street Mba, Streetwise, True Stories, Underpinnings, wall, Wall Street5 CommentsThe Wall Street MBA: Your Personal Crash Course in Corporate Finance
Product Description
A streetwise MBA that offers you a degree in success Whether you’re a novice or an experienced professional, The Wall Street MBA explains the underpinnings of financial valuation, financial analysis, and corporate accounting and describes how each drives corporate America and Wall Street. Peppered with true stories and amusing anecdotes, this concise, easy-to-read, interactive resource teaches MBA concepts by applying theory to real-life examples. You’ll learn how to review financial statements, analyze earnings, detect fraud, assess stock prices, value companies, and structure mergers and acquisitions, among other exercises…. More >>The Wall Street MBA: Your Personal Crash Course in Corporate Finance
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Apr27
Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who Dies, And Why. True Stories of Miraculous Endurance And Sudden Death, Library Edition
Filed under: Debt Consolidation; Tagged as: Adult Survivors, All Odds, Brain, Conclusions, Crash, death, Deep, Dies, Edition, Eleven Days, Endurance, Food Shelter, Library, Library Edition, Lives, Miraculous, Oceans, Old Girl, Peruvian Jungle, Psychology, Snowy Mountains, Stories, Sudden, Sudden Death, Survival, Survival Analysis, Tops, Tragic Death, True, True Stories, Why., Wilderness Survival5 CommentsProduct Description
The author delves into the science, psychology, and art of wilderness survival. His analysis is riveting, his conclusions startling. After her plane crashes, a seventeen-year-old girl spends eleven days walking through the Peruvian jungle. Against all odds, with no food, shelter, or equipment, she gets out. A better-equipped group of adult survivors of the same crash sits down and dies. What makes the difference? Examining such stories of miraculous endurance and tragic death—how people get into trouble and how they get out again (or not)—Deep Survival takes us from the tops of snowy mountains and the depths of oceans to the workings of the brain that control our behavior. Through close analysis of ca… More >> -
Mar22
The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash
Filed under: Personal Finance; Tagged as: Bestselling Book, Charles R Morris, Chicanery, Crash, credit, Credit Bubble, Credit Crunch, Delusions, Distress Signals, Dogmas, dollar, easy, Easy Money, Economic Mess, Financial Developments, Financial Instruments, Great, High, High Rollers, Inflation Dragon, meltdown, money, Paul Volcker, Recession, Remainder Mark, Rollers, Slew, Trillion, World History5 Comments- ISBN13: 9781586486914
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash
Product Description
Previously published as The Trillion Dollar MeltdownNow fully updated with the latest financial developments, this is the bestselling book that briefly and brilliantly explains how we got into the economic mess that is the Credit Crunch. With the housing markets unravelling daily and distress signals flying throughout the rest of the economy, there is little doubt that we are facing a fierce recession. In crisp, gripping prose, Charles R. Morris shows how got into this mess. He explains the arcane financial instruments, the chicanery, the policy misjudgments, the dogmas, and the delusions that created the greatest credit bubble in world history. Paul Volcker slew the inflation dragon in the early 1980s, and set… More >>The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash
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Mar19
The Neatest Little Guide to Stock Market Investing
Filed under: Debt Consolidation; Tagged as: Core Portfolio, Crash, Exchan, Guide., Investing, Investing In Stocks, Investing Stock, Investment Principles, Investment Program, Investors, Jason Kelly, Little, market, Market Investing, Neatest, Neatest Little Guide, Product Description, Profitable Investment, Quarterly Performance, Remainder Mark, Stock, Stock Investing, Stock Market Guide, Timely Strategies, True Investment, Turbulent Market5 Comments- ISBN13: 9780452295827
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
The Neatest Little Guide to Stock Market Investing
Product Description
The essential stock market guide updated with timely strategies for investing after the crash
Now in its fourth edition, Jason Kelly’s The Neatest Little Guide to Stock Market Investing has established itself as a clear, concise, and highly effective guide for investing in stocks. This comprehensively updated edition contains tried-and-true investment principles to teach investors how to create and refine a profitable investment program. New strategies and content include:
•Basic tips on when to invest and how to reduce the amount of risk in this turbulent market
•A new core portfolio technique that shows readers a way to achieve 3 percent quarterly performance with the IJR exchan… More >> -
Mar16
The Crash of 2008 and What it Means: The New Paradigm for Financial Markets
Filed under: Personal Finance; Tagged as: 2008, Boom And Bust, Breadth, Bust Cycles, Concise Essay, Crash, Credit Crisis, Decades, financial, Financial Markets, Financier, George Soros, Global Economic Activity, Great Depression, Invaluable Contribution, Markets, Means, Midst, New Paradigm, Origins, Paradigm, Philanthropist, Philosophical Depth, Remainder Mark, Upheavals5 Comments- ISBN13: 9781586486990
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
The Crash of 2008 and What it Means: The New Paradigm for Financial Markets
Product Description
In the midst of one of the most serious financial upheavals since the Great Depression, George Soros, the legendary financier and philanthropist, writes about the origins of the crisis and proposes a set of policies that should be adopted to confront it. Soros, whose breadth of experience in financial markets is unrivaled, places the crisis in the context of his decades of study of how individuals and institutions handle the boom and bust cycles that now dominate global economic activity. In a concise essay that combines practical insight with philosophical depth, Soros makes an invaluable contribution to our understanding of the great credit crisis and its implications for our nation and the world…. More >>The Crash of 2008 and What it Means: The New Paradigm for Financial Markets







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