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The Message of The Markets: How Financial Markets Foretell the Future--and How Y | |||
The Message of The Markets: How Financial Markets Foretell the Future--and How Y |
He''s not kidding. Insana insists that the market leaves coded messages, "breadcrumbs on the road to the gingerbread house." With a few charts and a bit of technical explanation, he shows how you could have profited in the Great Salad Oil Swindle of 1963, the crash of 1987, the Asian crisis of 1997, and other riveting fiscal dramas. Insana makes his points convincingly. There''s his anecdote about President Kennedy''s assassination, when the market began to tank before the news got out. One broker sparked the selloff, saying it "had something to do with the president." The possibly apocryphal explanation: Disappointed dealers at a Dallas brokerage house go back to their office when JFK''s parade is halted without explanation. Though nobody suspects the truth, their manager can think of no bullish reasons such a parade would be cancelled, only bearish ones, so he sells early and saves big.
While this story remains unverified, Insana has plenty of verified market-message examples: the 1990 oil spike that heralded Saddam Hussein''s Kuwait invasion two months early, the Thai baht crisis that presaged the turning of Asia''s tigers into whipped kittens, and the 1993 Dow Jones Utility Average warning preceding the 1994 bond crash. A notable anecdote: one trader deduced a 1980s spat on the border of Egypt and Libya based strictly on upticks in U.S. based oil companies and defense stocks and dips in two international oil stocks and a designer-jeans company dependent on Egyptian cotton.
Can you really predict Greenspan by reading Insana''s book? or is it all just Monday morning quarterbacking? Hard to say. But Insana''s book is as fun as the investment game itself. --Tim Appelo END --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
From Publishers Weekly
Significant world events and financial markets'' movements are closely aligned, says Insana, anchor of CNBC''s Street Signs and frequent contributor to Imus in the Morning and The Today Show. Among his most notable examples are the precipitous drop in the stock market right after President Kennedy was shot, but before the news of the assassination attempt appeared on the wire services, and the odd spike in oil prices before Iraq began massing troops at the Kuwaiti border. Insana emphasizes the importance of reading market statistics, including index charts and records of stock market performances around the world over time. He wants investors to understand that, like successful stock pickers, they must learn to play detective and look for the reasons for economic up and down turns in order to make more intelligent investments. In the concluding chapter, Insana briefly mentions some of the signs that pointed to a market correction in 2000. By late last year, he notes, only a handful of stocks were going up while many other stocks and indices were declining. Insana''s writing is lively, and the book offers insights into the complex machinations of the stock market and a thoughtful historical perspective, but he doesn''t offer a prescriptive plan for investment mastery, and readers expecting a guaranteed method of predicting future stock market winners will be disappointed. Agent, Arthur Klebanoff. Author tour; 25-city national radio campaign; 15-city NPR radio campaign. (Oct.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
-- Tom Brokaw, Anchor and Managing Editor, NBC Nightly News and author of The Greatest Generation
"Ron Insana is a great financial reporter -- and this book is an invaluable guide to the market''s mysterious ways." --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
-- Fast Company, October 2000
"Imagine -- a smart business book by a TV personality! Insana''s stock keeps rising." --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.