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Diary of a Very Bad Year Confessions of an Anonymous Hedge Fund Manager

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ISBN-10: 0061965308

ISBN-13: 9780061965302

Edition: 2010

Authors: Anonymous Hedge Anonymous Hedge Fund Manager, n+1, Keith Gessen

List price: $15.99
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Book details

List price: $15.99
Copyright year: 2010
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Publication date: 6/22/2010
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 272
Size: 5.31" wide x 8.00" long x 0.61" tall
Weight: 0.528
Language: English

n+1 is a twice-yearly print journal of politics, literature, and culture. Founded in 2004, it has been praised by the New York Times , TLS , Boston Globe , and Le Revue Des Deux Mondes , and reviled by the New Criterion and Gawker . In 2006 it won the Utne Independent Press Award for Best Writing. An anthology of its most significant essays was published in 2008 by Suhrkamp, in German.

Mikhail Afanasevich Bulgakov was a Russian playwright, novelist, and short-story writer best known for his use of humor and satire. He was born in Kiev, Ukraine, on May 15, 1891, and graduated from the Medical School of Kiev University in 1916. He served as a field doctor during World War I. Bulgakov's association with the Moscow Art Theater began in 1926 with the production of his play The Days of the Turbins, which was based on his novel The White Guard. His work was popular, but since it ridiculed the Soviet establishment, was frequently censored. His satiric novel The Heart of a Dog was not published openly in the U.S.S.R. until 1987. Bulgakov's plays including Pushkin and Moliere dealt…    

Introduction
Before The Collapse
Primetime for Subprime
Currency crosses
Black boxes
Death of an expert
The Death of Bear
At the office
Run on Bear
Argentina
Night thoughts of an HFM
Zombie banks
Florida
On the Eve
World loves dollars
Fannie & Freddie
How bad is it really?
Why banks hate bankruptcy
An existential question
The Collapse
How Bad is It?
Death of Lehman and shame of the Reserve Primary Fund
Central banks respond
AIG bailout
Effects on real economy
Trading with Martians
The price of bread
Terrifying moments
Year-End Closing
Layoffs
Detroit in trouble
Human Resources
Problems with TARP
HFM in Obama administration?
HFM as regulator
Madoff
Obama's stimulus, HFM's concerns
Aftermath
Populist Rage
Visit to China
Dollar as a reserve currency
Is Citi a zombie?
Goldman runs everything
n+l demands an accounting
HFM announces mini-sabbatical
Life After the Crisis
HFM fixes toilets, duns debtors
Missed opportunities
Smash it up!
The fate of the tallest building in Europe
Brazilian meat-packers
Stress tests
More on Obama
HFM's regrets
Vacation Plans
Memories of Rome
Crime and punishment
150 Years
Things looking up, for Wall St.
Long-Term Capital Management (or, what happens to failed HFMs)
The end of investment banks as we know them
Farewell
California ghost towns
Unemployment
Return of the low-margin bankers
Bullies and betrayers
Harvard blows up a hedge fund
Tears for fears
A shocking announcement
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index