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  • More Money Than God: Hedge Funds and the Making of a New Elite
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More Money Than God: Hedge Funds and the Making of a New Elite

More Money Than God: Hedge Funds and the Making of a New Elite

bySebastian Mallaby
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From Canada

JLG
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good account of the hedge fund industry
Reviewed in Canada πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ on September 17, 2018
Verified Purchase
As someone who's made a lot of money investing in hedge funds myself, this book was a great read.

Highly recommended for those of you who enjoy good business / investing books.
One person found this helpful
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alex
5.0 out of 5 stars This book just completely blew me away like no other book has
Reviewed in Canada πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ on May 30, 2016
Verified Purchase
I cannot believe I haven't heard of this book earlier.
This book just completely blew me away like no other book has. I love it because it essentially explains to you all major run ups of wallstreet
2 people found this helpful
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Bikaramjit S.
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in Canada πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ on January 11, 2018
Verified Purchase
Great Book
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Chris
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book
Reviewed in Canada πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ on August 9, 2015
Verified Purchase
Great book for anyone looking for an introduction to the history of hedge funds.
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Charles Lemay
5.0 out of 5 stars Addictive book!
Reviewed in Canada πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ on May 7, 2016
Verified Purchase
Great summary of the history of hedge funds...captivating stories!
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Mark Moskvitine
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant introduction to hedge fund history.
Reviewed in Canada πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ on February 28, 2018
I took a course on hedge funds and wanted to learn more about them. As somebody who loves history I'm very glad I picked up this particular book, because it is essentially a history book. The language here is highly accessible to people who aren't necessarily finance professionals, and who don't care for technical lingo. Wherever Sebastian Mallaby uses technical terms, he will explain what they mean. His storytelling ability is simply fantastic and you will often see dramatic narrative in many of his descriptions of people and situations. He is one of those authors that makes you want to read all that he has ever written. I have since purchased his other great book on Alan Greenspan (The Man Who Knew).

The book begins from the first hedge fund or (hedged fund) and continues to look at various and now widespread basic strategies as they are invented and tested. It is not extremely technical, but you will generally understand how funds made their money. Although this book is by no means exhaustive, it is a great introduction to the subject and is worth your time and the price.

After going through the hard copy of the book I bought the audiobook version. Because it is not textbook-like it is very easy to listen to.
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From other countries

Bill Dahl
5.0 out of 5 stars An Epic Contribution to the History of Finance
Reviewed in the United States πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ on November 24, 2010
Verified Purchase
This is the magnum opus on the hedge fund industry. As other hedge fund related books seek to either vilify the industry or brazenly praise the uncanny good fortunes industry insiders - this book does neither - which I found refreshing and a strategic positioning of this work from "the rest."

Sebastian Mallaby is currently the Paul Volcker Senior Fellow for International Economics at the Council on Foreign Relations. He's also a columnist at the WA Post and spent over a decade with The Economist responsible for international finance coverage - serving a bureau chief in Washington, Japan and southern Africa. He is the author of several noteworthy books on the political economy.

This work is an epic contribution to the historical evolution of certain financial products and the global industry(s) spawned therefrom in primarily, the western world. Welcome to the hedge fund industry, including an amazing cast of characters, their thought processes, training, relationships and the outcome of their work - The Making of A New Elite - with More Money Than God.

Admittedly, it is rare for me to dedicate myself to the reading of 400+ pages contained in any one volume, on any subject. Yet, the manner in which this book develops contains the unique qualities that inflame the desire within reader to come back for more. Incredibly well-written, researched, balanced and apolitical. This work is REQUIRED READING as an essential component in developing an understanding of global financial markets, risk assessment, risk management and the art of speculation.

As I read the book, Mallaby makes some points that have been central themes of other authors (See The WSJ's Scott Patterson's - The QUANTS), regarding the miscues that fueled poor investment/risk management strategies. Listen to Mallaby to garner the essence of this observation as it relates to the "art of speculation" - "The art of speculation is to develop one insight that others have overlooked and then trade big on that small advantage." P.91

"After the 1971 debacle, Weymar set about rethinking his theory of the market. He had begun with an economist's faith in model building and data: Prices reflected the fundamental forces supply and demand, so if you could anticipate those things - you were your way to riches. But experience had taught him some humility. An exaggerated faith in data could turn out to be a curse, breeding the Sol of hubris that leads you into trading positions too big to be sustainable."

"The real lesson of LTCM's failure was not that its approach to risk was too simple. It was that all attempts to be precise about risk are unavoidably brittle." P.231

(LTCM) Had misjudged the precision with which financial risk can be measured."p.245.

The point is that an unrepentant belief in the quantitative modeling that provides that "one insight that others have overlooked and then trade big on it" can have enormous consequences in either capturing returns or accelerating a cataclysmic demise of the capital under management.

How has that all worked out, in recent years? According to Mallaby, "Between 2000 and 2009, a total of about five thousand hedge funds went out of business, and not a single one required a taxpayer bailout."

Ah yes, "bailouts" - what is Mallaby's take on this issue? Listen to the following: "Capitalism works only when institutions are forced to absorb the consequences of the risks that they take on. When banks can pocket the upside while spreading the cost of their failures, failure is almost certain." P.13. Mallaby is clearly not a proponent of "privatizing the gains and socializing the losses."

What about our affection with history that drive financial and other forms of socio-economic modeling. Mallaby has some succinct insights:

"Projections are based on historical prices, and history could be a false friend." P. 233.

"In 1997, Merton and Scholes (LTCM) received the news that they had won the Nobel Prize for economics. The award was greeted as a vindication of the new finance: The inventors of the option-pricing model were being thanked for laying down a cornerstone of modern markets. By creating a formula to price risk, the winners had allowed it to be sliced, bundled, and traded' l thousand ways the fear of financial losses, which for centuries had acted as a brake on human endeavor, had been tamed by an equation." P.231.

So, where does Mallaby leaves us at the end of this magnum opus? His analysis leads him to conclude "The worst thing about the crisis is that it is likely to be repeated." P. 377. However, to suggest that the hedge fund industry was the primary culprit in either the creation or magnitude of the Great Recession would be erroneous. Again, between 2000 and 2009, 5,000 hedge funds are to have ceased operations - none of which required a taxpayer bailout. Mallaby also takes a rather benign approach to the plausibility/practicality of regulating this industry ("The record suggests that financial regulation is genuinely difficult, and success cannot always be expected." P. 379).

Yet, at the conclusion of this work, one quote from Mallaby continues to resonate with me: "It is the nonintuitive signals that often prove the most lucrative." p.302. However, the term "lucrative" as is as applicable to assessing risk and thereby avoiding potential losses, as it is to capturing returns on investment.

Like I said, an epic contribution to the historical evolution of the hedge fund industry. An uncanny, incredibly thorough, balanced treatment - written in a way that is appropriate for both industry insiders, and the lay-person. A perfect volume for graduate coursework in finance -- one that focuses on human beings, as well as the quantitative financial services products they develop and deploy in the global markets today.
14 people found this helpful
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Luis Wenus
5.0 out of 5 stars Incredible book
Reviewed in the United States πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ on March 6, 2023
Verified Purchase
Cannot recommend this book enough. A crazy amount of research must have gone into it. The history of the most important hedge funds concisely formulated and well explained.
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Malcolm Cameron
5.0 out of 5 stars Lack of Fear Itself
Reviewed in the United States πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ on July 15, 2010
Verified Purchase
Inverting Franklin Roosevelt "...investors should fear the lack of fear itself". This is just one insight Sebastian Mallaby gives us in `More Money Than God'. In fact, he gives a nuts and bolts feel for Hedge Funds, their history and the people - the masters of the universe - who operate them. It is a history of leverage, short selling and size characterized by major success and catastrophic failure.

Strangely, it also gives the small investor an insight into the share market. Is the market efficient? Can the market be beaten? If the market is not `efficient', hedge funds (and the small investor) can be successful. But sadly for an ongoing hedge fund, success removes the imperfections that it was profitably exploiting. "Sooner or later, every great investor's edge is destined to unravel" and often "quant brainiacs follow their computers to a well-deserved doom" because "the rocket scientists had blown up their rockets".

Success means a flood of money into the hedge fund. But "an analyst might identify a promising small company and figure that its value could double over three years, but if there were only $20 million worth of shares available to buy, it was hardly worth bothering with." Not so for the small investor, but then again the hedge funds seem to be able to short sell flexibly at will - a facility that should democratically be available to the small investor.

Starting in the 1990's, hedge funds became large enough to move markets of all kinds. They could even overpower governments. This allowed the Tiger Fund in 1998 to approach "Russian friends...to buy the entire stock of nongold precious metals held by the central bank and finance ministry...take the palladium, the rhodium, and the silver. All of it." leaving the logistics problem of getting it into a Swiss bank with Tiger's name on it.

For the small investor there is sound advice:

- it is often dangerous to trade on statistical evidence unless it can be intuitively explained". "Visceral" is the word meaning deep inward feelings rather than just an intellectual focus.

- "The whole point of leverage, the very definition of the term, is that investors feel ripples of the economy in a magnified way."

- We all rationalize success. One position by the Chanos Fund only worked out because the April 1989 Tiananmen Square demonstration broke out. This earned the comment "The way Ah see it, is that it took a revolution of a bihl-lion people for your darn short to work out."

- "Event driven" investing at Farallon Fund specialized in predicting events that cause existing prices to be wrong e.g. takeover announcements, demergers, avoiding bankruptcy, meeting banking covenants, major economic events, hybrid security maturity dates etc.

- `Pattern investing' used by the Medallion fund looking for patterns in the market. This applies research on French/English translation where the computer finds the grammatical rules not the programmer (using the Canadian Hansard which is conveniently in both languages).

- A Tiger Fund manager "should manage the portfolio aggressively, removing good companies to make way for better ones; should avoid risking more than 5 percent of capital on more than one bet; and should keep swinging through bad times until luck returned".

- Remember that "...the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent".

- "If one of these stocks fell ... it was probably being pushed by an institutional block trader that needed to raise cash...the price would soon revert, creating an opportunity to profit." In other words, why is the seller selling?

- "the biggest danger for buyers of illiquid assets is that in a crisis these assets will collapse the hardest."

- "...the larger an investment fund, the harder it was for a fund manager to generate returns" meaning the small investor has more opportunity.

- And remember, "LTCM calculated that this loss should have occurred less than once in the lifetime of the universe. But it happened anyway." The market does not follow a normal distribution; often it is not random; but then is it often predictable?

Mallaby grapples with the variety of thought behind the success of the hedge funds giving us a workmanlike insight. This attempt to describe how the hedge funds actually operate - as far as he is able (and he tells us when he cannot) - makes this a valuable book indeed.
13 people found this helpful
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Rick Spell
5.0 out of 5 stars A Fascinating in depth Read!!
Reviewed in the United States πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ on October 15, 2010
Verified Purchase
From reading about the crash from the perspective of a Mortgage Trader I segwayed to this book about the history of hedge funds. Great choice! This is an exceptional book and I would recommend this for all those with any interest in finance whatsoever!

The book details the history of hedge funds and their groundbreaking fee structure from the first hedge fund by A.W. Jones in the late 1940s. Written generally chronologically it moves forward showing how people left firms to start their own and funds and also the different strategies employed by the firms. This is particularly compelling because while I work in the Finance field my knowledge of hedge fund investing strategies and the many options was not very deep. This book does a great job of pulling back the curtain and showing more detail.

I will briefly mention some subjects and thoughts. George Soros and Stan Druckenmiller are covered at length. Their hedge fund strategies and specifically "breaking the bank" in more than one country highlights the importance and possible need for regulation of the hedge fund industry which is the underlying question to be answered throughout the book. Also Michael Steinhart whose great run in the 70/80s is explored as well as mention of whether he dealt with nonpublic information pertaining to block trading and Treasury auctions. Other interesting historical topics of interest were Julian Robertson of Tiger Investments, Citadel, and the Commodities Corp as well as their spin-offs. Of course no hedge fund book would be complete without mention of the LTCM meltdown. My personal favorite subject was of Paul Tudor Jones as I know so many of his friends since he grew up where I live and has had a run from the 80s to now. The book does a great job explaining his strengths coming from a commodities trading background. It really is fascinating to see the different nuances that so many of these successful investors take to achieve their goals.

I could talk on and on about theories explored such as Efficient Market Theory as well as his opinion of potential regulation needed but instead, BUY THIS BOOK if you have any interest in Finance. It is well worth the read and worth the time. As a final comment I would like to add that I read the Kindle version. The one negative to Kindle to me is you start reading and you really don't know where it ends. I suspect there is an easy way to tell but I don't take the time to look. This is a very large, long book that took me quite a bit of time to read. No problem. I'm just struggling to get used to Kindle vs. holding the actual book in my hand and knowing where I am. You can see by percentage read that you are in for a haul but still, this book is worth the time.
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