Wall Street Revalued: Imperfect Markets and Inept Central BankersISBN: 978-0-470-75005-6
Hardcover
256 pages
August 2009
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In the past central bankers have denied that markets can be valued and that it did not matter if they fell. These two intellectual mistakes are the fundamentals cause of the current financial market crisis. In addition, a lack of understanding by investors as to how to value the market has also resulted in widespread losses.
It is clearly of great importance to everyone that neither these losses nor the current financial chaos should be repeated and thus that the principle of asset valuation should be widely understood.
In this timely and thought-provoking sequel to the hugely
successful Valuing Wall Street Andrew Smithers puts forward a
coherent and testable economic theory in order to influence
investors, pension consultants and central bankers policy decisions
so that thy may prevent history repeating itself. Backed by theory
and substantial evidence Andrew shows that assets can be valued, as
financial markets are neither perfectly efficient nor absurd
casinos.