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Hedgehogging
Book

Hedgehogging

Wiley, 2006 más...


Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Well Structured
  • Background

Recommendation

Hedgehoggers come in different sizes and personalities, and their results swing widely from high levels of success to abject failure. Hedge-fund investing is only for rich people and institutions; however, these funds play an important role in the stock market and the economy. Author Barton Biggs is a cultured, high-level money manager and global strategist. After 30 years with Morgan Stanley (which took public exception to parts of this book), he raised substantial capital through his wealthy family and investors, and entered the hedgehogging jungle. He describes the field both coldly and romantically. He is an effective raconteur, especially when he details war stories about Wall Street’s unethical, double-crossing maneuvers, and strange but wealthy characters. getAbstract recommends this book for its smooth, dramatic writing about hedge funds, their context and the players who run them.

Take-Aways

  • Small investors can succeed, but to invest in hedge funds you need brains, guts and big capital.
  • Wall Street has thousands of ways to make it or break it, including “hedgehogging.”
  • Hedge funds are “gunslingers” hired by wealthy individuals and institutional investors.

About the Author

As a young Yale student, Barton Biggs was turned off by his stock-picking relatives and headed for creative writing. Yet he got to Wall Street. Within four years Institutional Investor’s poll ranked him as its top global strategist. He is a principal in a hedge fund, managing “well over” $1 billion.


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