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| Customer Reviews: | | Average Customer Review: ( 60 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
35 of 42 found the following review helpful:
A Global Macro Version of The Market Wizards Jul 25, 2006
By Kevin Kingston While working on the book Steven, the author, learned and shares with the reader through a series of interviews, "how the best minds in the business think about risk, portfolio construction, history, politics, central bankers, globalization, trading, competition, investors, hiring, the evolution of the hedge fund business and a variety of other details."
The book provides an inside look at the thoughts and actions of many great financial minds. For example did you know that Maynard Keynes (the father of modern macroeconomic theory) was completely wiped out by a margin call during the commodity slump of 1929 or that George Soros's Quantum Fund averaged over 30% for it's 31 ½ years existence and that $100,000 invested in the fund at inception was worth $420 million 31 ½ years later.
Jim Leitner of Falcon Management who claims to have taken $2 billion out of the market so far in his career says he "reads a tremendous amount of books and papers" and feels, "developing a network by going out and meeting groups of intelligent people is very important". He also recommends reading the Economist. Jim says, "The Economist had something on Nigeria, stating the average beer consumption had dropped from 34 liters to 3 and then rebounded to 4. That signaled to me that there must be a trade there. There is something going on when beer consumption drops 90% in a hot country and then starts to rebound. We started buying Guinness of Nigeria and its gone straight up over the last 3 years".
Peter Thiel, the former CEO and co-founder of PayPal who runs Clarium Capital Management was given this advice from a major venture capital partner when asking about the industry, "The best way to get into venture capital is to make at least $20 million by starting a company and selling it. Take that money and invest in other companies as a VC." He would give the same advice today.
Then there is Jim Rogers, the co-founder of the Quantum fund in 1969, and author of, Investment Biker, Adventures in Capitalism and Hot Commodities, who lives in a Victorian mansion overlooking the Hudson River on the Upper West Side of NY that he bought for $105,000 and is worth $15 million today. He's so hot on commodities he says, "one day lumberjacks and farmers may be on the cover of Fortune magazine" and thinks in the next decade, "oil will be at $150 a barrel and they will be drilling for it on the white house lawn and cotton will be $4 and they will be planting it in central park".
He is so bearish on the dollar he believes it can fall to half the value of the Euro. He says, "the pound sterling was once the worlds reserve currency and it went down 80% from top to bottom. The dollar went up 400% against it."
For market enthusiasts this book is tons of fun and you sure as hell pick up real insight as to the thoughts of some brilliant traders. I may pull more of my favorite parts that I'd like to remember and post them on my blog.
By Kevin Kingston, author of: A 20,000% Gain in Real Estate: A True Story About the Ups and Downs From Wall Street to Real Estate Leading to Phenomenal Returns
My Blog: The Real Estate Investors Blog
14 of 16 found the following review helpful:
Bulldozers vs Tricycles May 01, 2006
By Anonymous Finally a book worthy of replacing my tattered, well worn copies of Market Wizards. As a hedge fund manager and avid reader of trading books I am pleased to say that Steve Drobny's "Inside the House of Money" is now required reading alongside the legendary "Reminiscences of a Stock Operator". I suspect many aspiring traders will read the interviews over and over discovering additional glimpses of wisdom with each passing read. While many of the managers stand diametrically opposed in terms of trading methodologies and markets, it is evident that they share a great commonality in the their ability to generate innovative ideas and weigh scenarios which often go unnoticed. Rather than picking up nickels in front of bulldozers these traders are scooping up 100 dollar bills in front of slow moving tricycles. Brilliant.
10 of 11 found the following review helpful:
Meet the Greatest Minds from the Hedge Fund World ... Apr 06, 2007
By Sachin Gaikwad
"{ www.SachinOnline.com }"
One of the things money can't always buy is access to the great minds. Lets say you want have an 1 on 1 with Jim Rogers(the co-pioneer of the Hedge Funds concept). Will you be able to do it? Maybe ... maybe not. And if we expand the problem to 10+ top Hedge Fund minds ... the problem becomes even more challenging. However, instead if we find someone who has access to all these folks and can proxy for you? Won't that be neat? That is exactly what Steven Drobny has done in this book. He has been able to rein in some of the greatest & successful minds in the Hedge Funds arena and ask them interesting & revealing questions relating to their trading strategy, best trades, worst trades and the other lessons they learnt from their failures/successes.
As expected, this book is written in Q&A format. The author has done an excellent job of organizing and laying out the book which moves in gradual progression. The responses from the folks are equally simple and straight forward without the use of complicated financial language(except the overuse of long/short gamma/alpha) or financial models. In my opinion, the most interesting and revealing question/responses were the one relating to the biggest mistakes and the lessons learned from them. I would highly recommend reading the responses from the various folks on this particular question. It will be worth a lot.
Some of the key insights/views I found interesting ...
* Just being right does not matter. Being right at the right time does.
* Be fluid in your decisions. As fact changes, change your views too.
* If you make agressive bets, then make sure that you defend your investment with good hedging strategy.
* Cut your losses. Ride your winners.
It definitely is a must read ...
-Sachin
9 of 10 found the following review helpful:
A financial history lesson to presage the next financial crisis Nov 29, 2006
By Derek Harmon The more things change, the more they stay the same. Inside the House of
Money is an amalgam of perspectives from about twenty of the world's most
successful "global macro" hedge fund players in the vein of similar books
like Barton Biggs' Hedgehogging, Schwager's Market Wizards, or Elder's
Entries and Exits. The players range from home office hedge fund managers
to chief treasurers of Barclay's to reknown bow-tie wearing commodity
market demagogues. New Jersey's governor (a Goldman Sachs alumnus) even
makes an brief appearance in this book.
Of course none of these folks are like us, as inside the House of Money
they deal in highly leveraged $100 billion positions in esoteric financial
exotica like swaptions and steepeners. Readers whose experience may be
limited to discount brokerage stockpicking will quickly find theselves
submerged by the quasifantastic instruments hedge fund players flip
almost effortlessly. Drobny sometimes eases the impact with explanatory
side bars, and price graphs illustrate many good (and bad) market bets.
Nonetheless, feeling a certain amount of disorientation when first
entering the House is only to be expected.
When these trades go wrong, they are Oh So wrong, as revealed in many
personal reflections throughout the book. Yet given their failings they
have managed to survive global macro, and that much makes them remarkable.
We hear in the news with alarmingly increasing frequency of one fund after
another "blowing up," and reading Drobny's interviews with Wall Street's
elites you can see how nothing more than plain human pride, hubris, and
an unwillingness to recognize one's mistakes is to blame. For every
successful trader, there are countless mere mortals who must fall by
the wayside into ruin.
A subplot throughout the book, if not the author's stated goal, is to
answer the question "What is global macro?" When every story has been
told, you can rule out domestic investment and microeconomic analysis,
and in those leftovers that make the banquet look like only an appetizer
is a wide world of different kinds of investments which let hedgies do
nearly whatever they please.
The book is best regarded for retelling the financial history from
the collapse of Bretton Woods in the seventies to the Asian currency
crisis of the late nineties. The introductory chapter concisely hits
on a number of financial events that shaped the success of some, and the
losses of many. These events (and others like them) recur continuously
in Drobny's successive interviews with participants who traded them and
lived to tell about it. We see periods of low volatility regularly
awaken with a tectonic upheaval, and therein we glimpse tomorrow's dangers
and opportunities. Drobny calls on Dr. R. Lee Thomas III to conclude the
book with a short qualitative discussion into the probability of making
multiple independent bets, the classic "hedging" theory that reduces
risk.
Readable and contemporary, Inside the House of Money should grace your
nightstand (or bustling train commute into the city) before you think of
entering into a yen carry trade, going short volatility by selling
options, or just planning for your retirement. It's wisdom and
experience shall prove invaluable when the next economic dislocation
unwinds before us -- is it your opportunity, or your ruin?
9 of 10 found the following review helpful:
Interviews of varying quality - from 'meh' to 'fantastic' - with some notable hedge fund traders Jan 26, 2008
By Paul Franciosa
"Paul Franciosa, J.D., M.B.A."
MY RATING SYSTEM:
* - if you have to chose between torture and reading this book, then you might want to consider reading the book - although it depends on just how severe the torture would be.
** - if you've lost your job and have quite a bit of free time on your hands, and don't have anything else better to do, then you might want to consider reading this book; don't expect to learn much or really be entertained. It will however, help you pass the time until your death.
*** - meh...I'm indifferent. Reading this book will not alter your life in any significant way, yet it is not so horrendously dreadful that your taking the time to read it will be a complete waste of time.
**** - Good book to great book zone here. You should probably read this book if you have some spare time. This book could be interesting, entertaining, or informative.
***** - Outstanding book! Make time to read this book - you'll learn or be entertained or intrigued. The book might even be good enough to provide original or helpful insights into the world that we live in.
REVIEW:
Overall, while I found Inside the House of Money to be, at times, an interesting and engaging read, I did find that my perception of the value or interest of each of the interviews varied greatly throughout the book. I have not read the Market Wizards series or any of the other trader interview books that some other reviewers have mentioned as being superior to this book, so I can't really compare.
For me, the highlight of the book was quite likely the interview with Jim Leitner, with the interviews with Jim Rogers, Dwight Anderson and Scott Bessent also catching my interest. These interviews seemed to be more transparent in their discussions, more accessible, and more thought provoking than some of the others.
Generally, each of the interviews tends to hit on a few main areas: (a) how their careers developed and how they got into the industry; (b) that their main strategy is and some examples of good and bad trades they made; (c) some discussion of how they obtain/analyze information; (d) risk management/portfolio construction; (e) general views on the markets and areas they like/don't like; and (f) their thoughts on global macro as a strategy. There are a variety of different perspectives presented throughout the book, and while a couple of the interviews contained some basic technical finance lingo, most of the interviews should be easily understandable by readers with an understanding of economics and financial markets. Where is jargon, the author does a good job on including explanation boxes that clarify key terms and events to provide the reader with some background that helps clarify or put the interviewee's comments in context.
One of the interesting things that I picked up throughout the book is that there are a variety of different styles and techniques that are employed by these traders, and all are able to employ them in a way that achieves success. For example, some of the traders get research from investment banking research and sales groups while others avoid it. Some traders like to take vacations to clear their heads, others don't. Some traders find it valuable to visit the markets they are considering investing in, others find that doing so might make you more subject to making decisions based on anecdotal evidence.
I also enjoyed a couple tidbits that I picked up along the way. One trader mentioned the idea that being right at the wrong time is still being wrong. Also, the discussions of cost/benefit of managing money for others once you've established your skills and have accumulated enough of your own capital that you can trade for your own account.
In conclusion, I found the book interesting, but not captivating. I would have liked to have had more consistency in interview quality (some of the interviews didn't really seem to be that thought provoking or communicate that much of value to me). A decent read, but I'll take a look at some of the other trader books before I consider increasing my rating.
See all 60 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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