In the 1990s regulators and policy makers worried about the risk that financial institutions were carrying. Once the walls between investment and commercial banking came down with the repeal of Glass-Steagall, both trading and lending (and everything in between) were now housed under one roof with institutions freely accessing funds from one part of the institution to the other. But Glass-Steagall had just been repealed so how to fix the risk problem? Where there is a problem, there can usually be found an entrepreneur to give the market the product they want. And thus VAR was born and quickly embraced by financial institutions and regulators as the answer to managing risk. As long as an institutions VAR number was in an acceptable range, it could do what it wanted. Werent we all safer now? As it turns out, the answer was No. The metric not only hid the iceberg lurking beneath the surface but allowed banks to pile on more and greater risk. Each bubble, mania, and crash that em
Big Bets : How Large-Scale Change Really Happens
Rajiv Shah
audiobookDe verloren hand
Babah Tarawally
bookJohn Lewis : A Life
David Greenberg
audiobookbook400 Quotes to See the World Differently
Dalai Lama, Bruce Lee, Mother Teresa, Leonardo da Vinci
audiobookLeading on the Frontline : Remarkable Stories and Essential Leadership Lessons from the World's Danger Zones
Linda Cruse
audiobookPositive Leaders, Positive Change : Game-changing psychological insights into maximising profitability and wellbeing
Graham Keen
audiobookRace After Technology
Ruha Benjamin
audiobookThe Worst President in History
Matt Margolis, Mark Noonan
audiobookSome People Need Killing : Longlisted for the Women's Prize for Non-Fiction
Patricia Evangelista
bookDe kleine ikigai : Je kunt niet vroeg genoeg beginnen met het Japanse geheim voor geluk: wat is jouw ikigai?
Francesc Miralles, Héctor García
bookThe Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory : American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism
Tim Alberta
audiobookNotes to the Future : Words of Wisdom
Nelson Mandela
book