Fatal Risk: A Cautionary Tale of AIG's Corporate SuicideISBN: 978-0-470-88980-0
Hardcover
368 pages
April 2011
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Members of the seven strong judging panel will decide on a shortlist of up to six finalists in the middle of September.
‘If there is a theme that links most of the 14 titles on the longlist..it is their authors’ quest to work out how and why companies, governments and their leaders fail – and how not to go wrong in the future’
"A vivid portrait of the giant insurer at the center of the 2008
financial crisis."
(The Wall Street Journal)
"The best book of the crisis is Fatal Risk. This is a fabulous
book - but it deals with complex subjects without shying away from
their complexity and it assumes you have enough knowledge and
intelligence to cope. . . This is the best book yet written about
any specific episode of the crisis. Buy multiple copies. Give them
to your friends. They will be grateful too."
(Bronte Capital)
"A sober work that appears to have been researched extremely
thoroughly. . . more convincing on the mechanics of AIG's Suicide
than it is on any of the deeper motivations."
(The Financial Times)
"Through superb reporting, Boyd has written one of the financial
crisis genre's most important works."
(Bloomberg BusinessWeek)
"As Roddy Boyd demonstrates in his well-written study of AIG's fall, it was the very solidity of the company's credit rating that led it astray. Painstakingly built over the course of 40 years by an army veteran, Hank Greenberg, AIG was the ideal counterparty for Wall Street. . . For some, the demise of AIG was not the suicide described in the book's title, but an act of murder by Goldman. Mr Boyd argues that the investment bank was acting only as any prudent counterparty would. But the author's analysis is unlikely to dent the conviction of conspiracy theorists that AIG was rescued by Hank Paulson, the former Goldman chief executive turned treasury secretary, to prop up Goldman." (The Economist)
"Engaging and balanced account . . . Many books on the financial
meltdown that began in 2007 treat AIG as a plot point in a wider
drama. Yet valuable lessons can be gleaned from the narrower
account that Boyd lays out here -- lessons about the
responsibilities of leaders and regulators as well as the hazards
of financial engineering. . . The story of AIG's demise has many
moving pieces, large and small, which Boyd meshes into a smooth
narrative. . . Boyd is good with dialogue and knows how to keep the
story going. His reporting is thorough and fair, even when it comes
to Timothy F. Geithner's risible assertions that it wasn't the
Federal Reserve's job to pop bubbles."
(Bloomberg)
The best book on the financial crisis, and . . . favorite piece
of non-fiction work since Michael Lewis' The Big Short. . . The
reporting here is incredible."
(Distressed Debt Investing)
"A 10 best finance book.
Does the ongoing financial turmoil leave you scratching your head?
Worry not, here's our pick of the finest - and most readable -
books about Big Money..."
(The Independent)
'Fatal Risk is must reading for market insiders, investors, business leaders, and anyone who's wondered what really happened in 2008.’ (Hereisthecity.com, April 2011).
'researched extremely thoroughly’ (Financial Times, April 2011).
‘…a vivid portrait of the giant insurer at the center of the 2008 financial crisis.’ (Wall Street Journal Europe, April 2011).
‘A cautionary tale of corporate hubris.’ (Ethical Corporation Magazine, May 2011).
‘…Boyd is good with dialogue and knows how to keep the story going’. (Bloomberg.com, June 2011).