Wall Street Revalued Imperfect Markets and Inept Central Bankers

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Wall Street Revalued Imperfect Markets and Inept Central Bankers by Smithers, Andrew, 9780470750056
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  • ISBN: 9780470750056 | 0470750057
  • Cover: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 8/24/2009

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In Wall Street Revalued, leading analyst and bestselling author of Valuing Wall Street, Andrew Smithers presents a new way to value asset prices.Indifference to overvalued asset prices by investors, central banks and much of the financial press is the root cause of the current crisis. Bubbles in stock markets, house prices and financial assets cause huge damage when they fall, not only to their owners, but also to the world economy. An understanding of how to value assets is thus vital for managing the economy as well as for investors. This book explains how assets can be valued and shows how much incorrect and inaccurate information is published on the subject and how to spot this. Among investment bankers and financial journalists the two most common claims to value are, as Andrew shows, unadulterated lies. One of these is that "Shares are cheap given the level of current (or forecast) PE multiples" and the other is that "Shares are cheap relative to interest rates."Andrew also explains how asset prices affect the economy and how central banks lose their ability to stabilise it when bubbles collapse. The denial that markets can be valued has caused great damage. Markets are not perfectly efficient, nor are they are irrational casinos. This book sets out a new model for understanding the limited efficiency of financial markets, which is the key condition for improving investment and economic management today.Table of contents Chapter 1 Introduction. Chapter 2. Synopsis. Chapter 3. Interest Rate Levels and the Stock Market. Chapter 4. Changes in Interest Rates and Changes in Share Prices. Chapter 5. Household Savings and the Stock Market. Chapter 6. An Imperfectly Efficient Market. Chapter 7. The Efficient Market Hypothesis. Chapter 8 Testing the Imperfectly Efficient Market Hypothesis. Chapter 9. Other Claims for Valuing Equities Chapter 10. Forecasting Returns without Using Value. Chapter 11. House Prices. Chapter 12. The Price of Liquidity. Chapter 13. The Return on Equities and the Return on Equity Portfolios. Chapter 14. The General Undesirability of Leveraging Equity Returns. Chapter 15. A Rare Exception to the Rule against Leverage. Chapter 16. Profits are Over rather than Understated. Chapter 17. Intangibles. Chapter 18. Accounting Issues. Chapter 19. The Impact on q. Chapter 20. Problems with Valuing the Markets of Developing Economies. Chapter 21. Central banks' Response to Asset Prices. Chapter 22 Deflation, Inflation, Prevention and Cure.
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