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House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street
 
 

House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street (Hardcover)

by William D. Cohan (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
List Price: CDN$ 33.00
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"Engrossing....[Cohan] gives us in these pages a chilling, almost minute-by-minute account of the 10, vertigo-inducing days that one year ago revealed Bear Stearns to be a flimsy house of cards in a perfect storm....He does a deft job of explicating the underlying reasons that put Bear Stearns in peril in the first place....turns complex Wall Street maneuverings into high drama that is gripping — and almost immediately comprehensible — to the lay reader....riveting, edge-of-the-seat reading"
--Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times

"Cohan vividly documents the mix of arrogance, greed, recklessness, and pettiness that took down the 86 year old brokerage house and then the entire economy. It's a page-turner in the tradition of the 1990 Barbarians at the Gate by Bryan Burrough and John Heylar, offering both a seemingly comprehensive understanding of the business and wide access to insiders....hard to put down, especially thanks to its dishy, often profane, quotes from insiders" --BusinessWeek

"Masterfully reported....[Cohan] has turned into one of our most able financial journalists....he deploys not only his hands-on experience of this exotic corner of the financial industry but also a remarkable gift for plain-spoken explanation...the other great strength of this important book is the breadth and skill of the author's interviews...Cohan does a brilliant job of sketching in the eccentric, vulgar, greedy, profane and coarse individuals who ignored all these warnings to their own profit and the ruin of so many others. It's impossible to do justice to his reportorial detail in a brief review..." -- Los Angeles Times


"A riveting blow-by-blow account of the days leading up to the government-backed shotgun wedding (to JPM)." -- The Economist

"A masterly reconstruction of Bear Stearns implosion--a tumultuous episode in Wall Street history that still reverberates throughout our economy today....meticulous reporting.....first drafts of history don't get much better than this" --Bloomberg


Product Description

On March 5, 2008, at 10:15 A.M., a hedge fund manager in Florida wrote a post on his investing advice Web site that included a startling statement about Bear Stearns & Co., the nation’s fifth-largest investment bank: “In my book, they are insolvent.”

This seemed a bold and risky statement. Bear Stearns was about to announce profits of $115 million for the first quarter of 2008, had $17.3 billion in cash on hand, and, as the company incessantly boasted, had been a colossally profitable enterprise in the eighty-five years since its founding.

Ten days later, Bear Stearns no longer existed, and the calamitous financial meltdown of 2008 had begun.

How this happened – and why – is the subject of William D. Cohan’s superb and shocking narrative that chronicles the fall of Bear Stearns and the end of the Second Gilded Age on Wall Street. Bear Stearns serves as the Rosetta Stone to explain how a combination of risky bets, corporate political infighting, lax government regulations and truly bad decision-making wrought havoc on the world financial system.

Cohan’s minute-by-minute account of those ten days in March makes for breathless reading, as the bankers at Bear Stearns struggled to contain the cascading series of events that would doom the firm, and as Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, New York Federal Reserve Bank President Tim Geithner, and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke began to realize the dire consequences for the world economy should the company go bankrupt.

But HOUSE OF CARDS does more than recount the incredible panic of the first stages of the financial meltdown. William D. Cohan beautifully demonstrates why the seemingly invincible Wall Street money machine came crashing down. He chronicles the swashbuckling corporate culture of Bear Stearns, the strangely crucial role competitive bridge played in the company’s fortunes, the brutal internecine battles for power, and the deadly combination of greed and inattention that helps to explain why the company’s leaders ignored the danger lurking in Bear’s huge positions in mortgage-backed securities.

The author deftly portrays larger-than-life personalities like Ace Greenberg, Bear Stearns’ miserly, take-no-prisoners chairman whose memos about re-using paper clips were legendary throughout Wall Street; his profane, colorful rival and eventual heir Jimmy Cayne, whose world-champion-level bridge skills were a lever in his corporate rise and became a symbol of the reasons for the firm’s demise; and Jamie Dimon, the blunt-talking CEO of JPMorgan Chase, who won the astonishing endgame of the saga (the Bear Stearns headquarters alone were worth more than JP Morgan paid for the whole company).

Cohan’s explanation of seemingly arcane subjects like credit default swaps and fixed- income securities is masterful and crystal clear, but it is the high-end dish and powerful narrative drive that makes HOUSE OF CARDS an irresistible read on a par with classics such as LIAR’S POKER and BARBARIANS AT THE GATE.

Written with the novelistic verve and insider knowledge that made THE LAST TYCOONS a bestseller and a prize-winner, HOUSE OF CARDS is a chilling cautionary tale about greed, arrogance, and stupidity in the financial world, and the consequences for all of us.


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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index
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5 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Helpful Summary of the Early Public Information about Bear Stearns Fleshed Out with Interview Details, Mar 28 2009

The title of this book amuses me. It refers simultaneously to the fixation that Bear Stearns' leaders had on playing championship bridge and to the fact that the company's debt structure was a house of cards that could come down with only the slightest shift in the wind.

I recently went to a graduate school reunion and one of my classmates proudly told me that his daughter had gotten a job working at a major investment bank for two years. I felt like laughing. Why would anyone want a child to work at an investment bank?

As I read House of Cards, I resisted (with difficulty) the urge to send a copy to my classmate. I'm sure it would have been quite an eye-opener for him.

If you read most of what was published about the collapse of Bear Stearns as it occurred and have a pretty good sense of the current problems in the financial system, you won't find anything new here except for gossipy details about how clueless the leaders at Bear Stearns were about their circumstances and what needed to be done. If you like gossip about people failing to do their jobs and their personal foibles, this book is pretty good for teaching you what much of Wall Street is like.

If you want to know more about what happened at Bear Stearns and why from a financial or economic point of view that goes beyond what has been published, this book will be a waste of time for you.

For those who just want the gossip, they will probably find the book to be longer and more detailed than they need. For those people, my advice is to just read chapters 1-12 and 25-29. That will give you enough for a sense of this story of how those who felt mighty fell.

What happened in a nutshell is that Bear Stearns (like many Wall Street firms before it) believed itself to be invincible and didn't spend much time looking at what might go wrong. When evidence suggested any problem, the leaders ignored the evidence and looked to maximize short-term profits (even if those might lead to huge losses in the future). If their gambles (based on mountains of short-term debt) didn't work out, they probably assumed some other investment bank would pay them tens of millions a year to start all over again making the same kinds of gambles. It's a lottery where those who run the lottery feel they will always win . . . even if the investors lose. This time some of them were wrong, and they paid the price.

It will be fun to see this story rewritten after banks and insurance companies finally admit that they have lost many more trillions of dollars than anyone is willing to talk about now. I suspect the Bear Stearns story will look less awful then than it does now. Why? The greatest financial misdeeds in this financial crisis may well be ahead of us, not behind us.

Don't bet more than you can afford, no matter how good your cards look!
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