Inside the House of Money, Revised and Updated: Top Hedge Fund Traders on Profiting in the Global Markets
This updated paperback edition of Inside the House of Money lifts the veil on the typically opaque world of hedge funds offering a rare glimpse at how today’s highest paid money managers approach their craft. Now with new commentary, author, Steve Drobny takes you even further into the hedge fund industry. He demystifies how these star traders make billions for their well-heeled investors, revealing their theories, strategies and approaches to markets. Whereas some still maintain that rationality permeates financial markets, Drobny captures a different dimension, showing how the unquantifiable human forces of emotion and intuition are also at play. Along the way, readers get an inside look at firsthand trading experiences through some of the major world financial crises of the last few decades including tragedies such as September 11th. Whether Russian bonds, Pakistani stocks, Southeast Asian currencies or stakes in African brewing companies, no market or instrument is out of bounds for these elite global macro hedge fund managers. Highly accessible and filled with in-depth expert opinion, Inside the House of Money is a must-read for financial professionals and anyone else interested in understanding how greed, fear, and the human forces of emotion drive world markets.
Rating:
(out of 4 reviews)
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Review by Bachelier for Inside the House of Money, Revised and Updated: Top Hedge Fund Traders on Profiting in the Global Markets
Rating:
This book is a little tough to take as a read-through in one sitting. Not because it is so murky, but because so many of these global macro players exhibit so much self similarity that author Steve Drobny has a hard time making each interview fresh.
But the big take-away from the book is that like the term “hedge fund” is detached from its original definition and no longer has any meaning, so too with “global macro.” While there is a lot of self-similarity (as stated above) he value is in the distinctions and the places where these traders are operating (both physically and market segments/opportunity sets).
This is a well written, combination of interview and narrative that is an order or magnitude above the “gee whiz” subservient tone of the “Market Wizards” books. Still, for me the nagging question remains that many of these traders are not so much as insightful but lucky, as any population of random coin flippers will still have a handful of serial winners at the end. Therefore, the most valuable interviews were with those guys who talked about their mistakes in detail, and why they made them.
Few talked of how they raised their AUM, which for me is the big secret.
All in all, worth reading, but for those with their head in the game or decades of experience only marginal utility.