Archive for November, 2008

New Book - The Finance Crisis and Rescue: What Went Wrong? Why? What Lessons Can Be Learned?

TORONTO, Nov 25, 2008 /PRNewswire-USNewswire via COMTEX/ — A timely new book examining this year’s financial crisis is the second title to be published by Rotman/UTP Publishing, an Imprint of University of Toronto Press in partnership with the Rotman School of Management.
The Finance Crisis and Rescue: What Went Wrong? Why? What Lessons Can Be Learned? features thought leaders from the Rotman School explaining the financial crisis and rescue from a variety of perspectives.
“Covering everything from credit risk to value investing to leadership, our experts tackle the broken model and proposed rescue and provide insight for moving ahead and shaping the world of finance for the better,” writes Rotman Dean Roger Martin in the foreword to the book. “In the end, the treatment required to cure this unhealthy system may be deceptively simple: to produce more beneficial results for stakeholders and for society at large, firms must lower their expectations of monetary incentives and be more cognizant about setting them within a context that reduces the tendency for extremes of behaviour.”
The eleven chapters included in the book are:

— Derivatives and Risk Management: “The Financial Crisis of 2008:
Another Case of Irrational Exuberance” by John Hull, Maple
Financial Group Chair in Derivatives and Risk Management, Professor of
Finance and Co-Director — Master of Finance Program;
— Value Investing: “Value Investing in the Crisis: How Margins of
Safety Melted Away” by Eric Kirzner, John H. Watson Chair in Value
Investing and Professor of Finance;
— Financial Analysis: “Integrative Thinking (or Lack of) and the
Current Crisis” by Ramy Elitzur, Edward Kernaghan Professor of
Financial Analysis and Associate Professor of Accounting;
— Business Economics: “The Financial Crisis of 2008 and the
“Real Economy”: Damage but Not Disaster” by Peter Dungan,
Adjunct Associate Professor of Business Economics and Director — Policy
and Economic Analysis Program;
— International Business: “Global Lessons from the 2008 Financial
Crisis” by Wendy Dobson, Director — Institute for International
Business and Professor of Business Economics;
— Structured Finance: “Subprime, Market Meltdown and Learning from
the Past” by Laurence Booth, CIT Chair in Structured Finance and
Professor of Finance;
— Pension Management: Looking Across the Abyss: Pension Design and
Management in the Twenty-First Century” by Keith Ambachtsheer,
Director — International Centre for Pension Management and Adjunct
Professor of Finance;
— Behavioural Finance: ‘The Influence of Investor Behaviour” by
Lisa Kramer, Canadian Securities Institute Research Foundation Term
Chair and Associate Professor of Finance;
— Corporate Governance: “Where Were the Directors?” by David
Beatty, Conway Director — Clarkson Centre for Business Ethics and Board
Effectiveness and Professor of Strategic Management;
— Leadership: “Rescuing the Global Financial System: The Failure of
American Leadership” by Jim Fisher, Vice-Dean — Programs, CCMF
Chair in Entrepreneurship and Professor of Strategic Management;
— Public Policy: “Carts and Horses and Horses and Carts: How Public
Policy Led to the Subprime Disaster” by Michael Hlinka (Rotman MBA
‘86), Instructor, University of Toronto School of Continuing
Studies and Business Commentator, CBC TV and CBC Radio.

The book will be available at most major book retailers in Canada and also online at www.utppublishing.com and www.rotman.utoronto.ca/financecrisis for a suggested retail price of CDN $24.95.
As previously announced, the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management and the University of Toronto Press have collaborated to create Rotman/UTP Publishing, a new imprint devoted to publishing actionable business information of exceptional quality. The imprint’s first title, Fixing the Future: How Canada’s Usually Fractious Governments Worked Together to Rescue the Canada Pension Plan by Bruce Little, was published in October 2008.
Founded in 1901, the University of Toronto Press is Canada’s oldest scholarly press and one of the largest university presses in North America, releasing over 150 new scholarly, reference, and general-interest books each year, as well as maintaining a backlist of over 1500 titles in print. For more information, visit www.utppublishing.com.
The Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto is redesigning business education for the 21st century with a curriculum based on Integrative Thinking. Located in the world’s most diverse city, the Rotman School fosters a new way to think that enables the design of creative business solutions. The School is currently raising $200 million to ensure Canada has the world-class business school it deserves. For more information, visit www.rotman.utoronto.ca.

Permanent link to this post: New Book - The Finance Crisis and Rescue: What Went Wrong? Why? What Lessons Can Be Learned?
From the Finance articles and news weblog

Tags: , ,

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008 News Comments Off

Compare Mortgage Lenders - Making the Right Choice

Before making that big decision to refinance your home or purchase a new one with a good mortgage deal, it is always best to investigate and examine mortgage lending companies, their track record and current financial status. And while the interest rates and payment terms that are being offered are just as important, it is always best to work with mortgage lenders and financial institutions that your can trust and rely on.

Compare mortgage lenders based on the length of time that they have been in the business as well as the number of clients they currently have. Know their track records. Take notice of the banks that they do business with to make sure that they are stable lenders with stable banks to back them up.

Of course, as most people would first consider in choosing their lending companies, compare mortgage lenders based on the deals they offer. Most of the time it is not just good to check out which rates are more competitive.

Do not forget that there may be deals that are too good to be true but will turn out to be nightmares in the end. There are good online resources and mortgage calculators that allow you to compare mortgage deals effectively. Make sure that you avail of deals that are not only reasonable but are well within your financial capability to pay, after you have taken due notice of your regular expenses.

Get recommendations and testimonials. Scrounge around for feedback, both good and bad, on the mortgage companies that you are considering before closing a deal.

You need to read Part Two of Compare Mortgage Lenders before you decide on a Mortgage Lender.

For all your Mortgage Advice, Go to… TopMortgageAdvice.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Darryl_Power

Permanent link to this post: Compare Mortgage Lenders - Making the Right Choice
From the Finance articles and news weblog

Tags: ,

Thursday, November 20th, 2008 Mortgage-Refinancing Comments Off

Pages

 

November 2008
M T W T F S S
« Sep   Dec »
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930