Too Big to Fail
The Inside Story of How Wall Street and Washington Fought to Save the Financial System--and Themselves. Winner of the Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award and the Loeb Award
(Sprache: Englisch)
Sorkin delivers the first true, behind-the-scenes, moment-by-moment account of how the greatest financial crisis since the Great Depression developed into a global tsunami. b&w photo insert.
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Sorkin delivers the first true, behind-the-scenes, moment-by-moment account of how the greatest financial crisis since the Great Depression developed into a global tsunami. b&w photo insert.
Lese-Probe zu „Too Big to Fail “
PROLOGUEStanding in the kitchen of his Park Avenue apartment, Jamie Dimon poured himself a cup of coffee, hoping it might ease his headache. He was recovering from a slight hangover, but his head really hurt for a different reason: He knew too much.
It was just past 7:00 a.m. on the morning of Saturday, September 13, 2008. Dimon, the chief executive of JP Morgan Chase, the nation s third largest bank, had spent part of the prior evening at an emergency, all-hands-on-deck meeting at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York with a dozen of his rival Wall Street CEOs. Their assignment was to come up with a plan to save Lehman Brothers, the nation s fourth-largest investment bank or risk the collateral damage that might ensue in the markets.
To Dimon it was a terrifying predicament that caused his mind to spin as he rushed home afterward. He was already more than two hours late for a dinner party that his wife, Judy, was hosting. He was embarrassed by his delay because the dinner was for the parents of their daughter s boyfriend, whom he was meeting for the fi rst time.
Honestly, I m never this late, he offered, hoping to elicit some sympathy.
Trying to avoid saying more than he should, still he dropped some hints about what had happened at the meeting. You know, I am not lying about how serious this situation is, Dimon told his slightly alarmed guests as he mixed himself a martini. You re going to read about it tomorrow in the papers.
As he promised, Saturday s papers prominently featured the dramatic news to which he had alluded. Leaning against the kitchen counter, Dimon opened the Wall Street Journal and read the headline of its lead story: Lehman Races Clock; Crisis Spreads.
Dimon knew that Lehman Brothers might not make it through the weekend. JP Morgan had examined its books earlier that week as a potential lender and had been unimpressed. He also had decided to request some extra collateral from the firm out of fear it might fall. In
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the next twenty four hours, Dimon knew, Lehman would either be rescued or ruined.
Knowing what he did, however, Dimon was concerned about more than just Lehman Brothers. He was aware that Merrill Lynch, another icon of Wall Street, was in trouble, too, and he had just asked his staff to make sure JP Morgan had enough collateral from that firm as well. And he was also acutely aware of new dangers developing at the global insurance giant American International Group (AIG) that so far had gone relatively unnoticed by the public it was his firm s client, and they were scrambling to raise additional capital to save it. By his estimation AIG had only about a week to find a solution, or it, too, could falter.
Of the handful of principals involved in the dialogue about the enveloping crisis the government included Dimon was in an especially unusual position. He had the closest thing to perfect, real-time information. That deal flow enabled him to identify the fraying threads in the fabric of the financial system, even in the safety nets that others assumed would save the day.
Dimon began contemplating a worst-case scenario, and at 7:30 a.m. he went into his home library and dialed into a conference call with two dozen members of his management team.
You are about to experience the most unbelievable week in America ever, and we have to prepare for the absolutely worst case, Dimon told his staff. We have to protect the firm. This is about our survival.
His staff listened intently, but no one was quite certain what Dimon was trying to say.
Like most people on Wall Street including Richard S. Fuld Jr., Lehman s CEO, who enjoyed one of the longest reigns of any of its leaders many of those listening to the call assumed t
Knowing what he did, however, Dimon was concerned about more than just Lehman Brothers. He was aware that Merrill Lynch, another icon of Wall Street, was in trouble, too, and he had just asked his staff to make sure JP Morgan had enough collateral from that firm as well. And he was also acutely aware of new dangers developing at the global insurance giant American International Group (AIG) that so far had gone relatively unnoticed by the public it was his firm s client, and they were scrambling to raise additional capital to save it. By his estimation AIG had only about a week to find a solution, or it, too, could falter.
Of the handful of principals involved in the dialogue about the enveloping crisis the government included Dimon was in an especially unusual position. He had the closest thing to perfect, real-time information. That deal flow enabled him to identify the fraying threads in the fabric of the financial system, even in the safety nets that others assumed would save the day.
Dimon began contemplating a worst-case scenario, and at 7:30 a.m. he went into his home library and dialed into a conference call with two dozen members of his management team.
You are about to experience the most unbelievable week in America ever, and we have to prepare for the absolutely worst case, Dimon told his staff. We have to protect the firm. This is about our survival.
His staff listened intently, but no one was quite certain what Dimon was trying to say.
Like most people on Wall Street including Richard S. Fuld Jr., Lehman s CEO, who enjoyed one of the longest reigns of any of its leaders many of those listening to the call assumed t
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Autoren-Porträt von Andrew R. Sorkin
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autor: Andrew R. Sorkin
- 2010, Upd. ed., 640 Seiten, Masse: 21,2 x 14 cm, Kartoniert (TB), Englisch
- Verlag: Penguin US
- ISBN-10: 0143118242
- ISBN-13: 9780143118244
- Erscheinungsdatum: 18.12.2010
Sprache:
Englisch
Pressezitat
Comprehensive and chilling. Time
. . . His action scenes are intimate and engaging.
The New Yorker
Sorkin s prodigious reporting and lively writing put the reader in the room for some of the biggest-dollar conference calls in history. It s an entertaining book, brisk book . . . Sorkin skillfully captures the raucous enthusiasm and riotous greed that fueled this rational irrationality.
The New York Times Book Review
Brings the drama alive with unusual inside access and compelling detail . . . A deeply researched account of the financial meltdown."
BusinessWeek
Meticulously researched . . . told brilliantly. Other blow-by-blow accounts are in the works. It is hard to imagine them being this riveting.
The Economist
Sorkin s densely detailed and astonishing narrative of the epic financial crisis of 2008 is an extraordinary achievement that will be hard to surpass as the definitive account . . . as a dramatic close-up, his book is hard to beat.
Financial Times
Sorkin s book, like its author, is a phenom . . . an absolute tour de force.
The American Prospect
Andrew Ross Sorkin pens what may be the definitive history of the banking crisis.
The Atlantic Monthly
Andrew Ross Sorkin has written a fascinating, scene-by-scene saga of the eyeless trying to march the clueless through Great Depression II.
Tom Wolfe
Sorkin has succeeded in writing the book of the crisis, with amazing levels of detail and access.
Reuters
Sorkin can write. His storytelling makes Liar s Poker look like a children s book.
SNL Financial
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