The City: Inside the great expectation machine (Financial Times Series) - Softcover

Golding, Mr Tony.

 
9780273661047: The City: Inside the great expectation machine (Financial Times Series)

Inhaltsangabe

The landscape of our financial system is dominated by institutional investment. The funds move markets when they act, and corporate empires can rise, fall or change hands on the tide of institutional opinion and the flow of equity. Today, in many ways, these institutions are the City, such is their influence over the whole financial process.  They are at the heart of the expectation machine; the Capital of capital.

These all-powerful financial players cast a long shadow over the worlds of investment, corporate and venture finance, and yet City outsiders - from private investors to company directors - many of whose expectations and fortunes are tied to the flow of equity, know little about them.  They may glimpse parts of the process through the, frequently distorted, lens of the press; they may find their activities and fortunes affected by the movements of institutional players, but rarely do they understand the subtle and complex relationships that drive behaviour of the City.

It is remarkable, in view of the power wielded by the big investment institutions, how little has been written about them, especially from an analytical rather than anecdotal standpoint.  The financial world, and the business world it drives, need a better understanding of the City and the behaviour of equity - the "visible" part of what the City does.

In The City; Inside the Great Expectations Machine , Investment Analyst Tony Golding takes you inside the equity market and explains its structure, dynamics and behaviour. An easy-to-read, comprehensive analysis of the big investment institutions who dominate the stock market, with key insights into their impact on the City, industry and the private investor.  This book will explain how the institutions achieved their ascendancy, acquire their funds, invest those funds and significantly influence other City activities and the corporate world in the process.  The book will trace the flow of funds through the City and offer valuable insights into how fund managers behave, what drives their performance, the pressures they are under and the effects of their actions on the investment and corporate worlds.     The behaviour of the investment institutions - pension funds, insurance companies, unit trusts, investment trusts - touches, in one way or another, the great majority of those living in the UK.  To an extent that few outside the City appreciate, they dominate the London stock market, both in terms of ownership and activity. This text examines the way these institutions work, how fund managers invest and the implications of their investment behaviour. Institutional investors own 75 per cent of the shares quoted in the UK. In no other major economy - including the USA, where the institutional control is a much more modest 55 per cent - do the investment instituions exert such a grip on the corporate sector.  It is not uncommon for large and medium-sized British companies to have 80 or 90 per cent institutional ownership. Share-prices are determined by the fund managers working in a small number of large institutions.  The nostalgic idea that price setting in the stock market is the result of a multitude of individual decisions is, this text argues, a dangerous illusion. The book provides information about the investment institutions around which the stock market revolves, arguing that their perceptions and their actions determine the level of share-prices and much else besides, such as the success or failure of a takeover bid.  It asks: what motivates fund managers and how do they make their decisions?; How do companies communicate with their institutional shareholders, especially in regard to the task of managing expectations?  What companies do fund managers like or dislike, and why?  And to what extent do they rely on the investment analysts employed by the investment banks for information and advice?

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Tony Golding After graduating from Cambridge anbd the University of Sussex, where he gained a doctorate in industrial economics, Tony spent several years with an international electronics company. He entered the City in 1974 and spent 24 years there, starting as an investment analyst with a small, research-based firm of stockbrokers. In 1978 he joined Flemings, the London-based investment bank, becoming a director and head of research in the asset management division. Before the Big Bang in 1986 he took responsibility for setting up the research and sales functions in Fleming's newly extablished securities operation. In 1989 he moved over to investment banking, where he specialized in the generation and marketing of acquisition and equity-financing ideas in several industry sectors, both in the UK and internationally. He left in 1998 to write this book. Many people in the City can lay claim to an in-depth knowledge of one or other of institutional investment or securities or investment banking, but very few have first-hand experience of working at director level in all three. In writing this book, Tony has drawn extensively on the all-round perspective that his varied career has given him.

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Just how did the City achieve such high status? Exactly how do the big institutions exercise their controlling influence over British industry and commerce? Does the City still have a life of it's own, or has the overwhelming influence of the American investment banks meant that London has become little more than a colonial outpost of Wall Street? The City: inside the Great Expectation Machine tackles these broad issues and, through a step-by-step analysis of the current institutional investment and investment banking scene, offers answers to several important questions including:

  • What motivates institutional fund managers and how do they make their decisions?
  • What do investment analysts actually do and why do they get paid so much for doing it?
  • What is it about companies that turns institutional investors on - and off?
  • Why does the City neglect smaller companies?
  • What is the 'New Industrial Compact' between 'UK plc' and the City, and how does it work?
Based on 24 years experience, The City: inside the Great Expectation Machine 2nd ed. is a compelling guide to what really makes the City tick, taking you inside the equity market and explaining its structure, dynamics and behaviour. Extensively revised throughout, this new edition, brings the reader up to date with life in the City. "A fascinating anatomy of the City, explaining to private investors how fund managers reach their decisions."
Investors Chronicle

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