This book uses the story of the U.S. business and political dealings of Deutsche Bank to illuminate important developments in the ongoing globalization of major financial institutions.
This book uses the story of the U.S. business and political dealings of Deutsche Bank to illuminate important developments in the ongoing globalization of major financial institutions.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Christopher Kobrak holds a BA degree in philosophy from Rutgers University and MA, MBA, and PhD degrees from Columbia University in history, finance/accounting, and business history. He is a CPA and has spent ten years working in numerous business positions for Sterling Drug, Inc. He teaches corporate finance and business history at ESCP-EAP, concentrating on international finance, financial theory, history of capital markets, and corporate governance. His publications include: National Cultures and International Competition: The Experience of Schering AG, 1851-1950 (Cambridge University Press), European Business, Dictatorship and Political Risk, 1920-1945, edited with Per Hansen, and articles and reviews in many business history journals. He has taught at Columbia University, Warsaw University, and Toulouse University, from which he received his Habilitation in Management. He is currently working on communications about the economic contribution of family businesses, corporate governance, and foreign direct investment in the service sector.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Overview of the title and terrain Part I. On Golden Chariots - Deutsche Bank's US Business 1870 to 1914: 2. First steps 3. Deutsche Bank and American electrification 4. The Northern Pacific bankruptcy saga 5. The fallout 6. Other transportation and commercial investments 7. A taste for start-ups 8. Transitions Part II. Deutsche Bank and the US During 'Great Disorder' - 1914-57: 9. Personal, communication, and financial breakdowns 10. War supplies, espionage, and expropriation 11. Salvaging assets and business prophets in the war's immediate aftermath 12. Deutsche Bank and reestablishing financial flows 13. Deutsche Bank and the collapse of the fragile world economic order 14. Second Phoenix Part III. Renewal and Re-entry - 1957-2000: 15. Divisive issues and the making of a new financial landscape 16. From Abs to Kopper and from joint ventures to branching 17. Bankers' trust 18. Postscript: Deutsche Bank in the US and the future of multinational banking.
1. Overview of the title and terrain Part I. On Golden Chariots - Deutsche Bank's US Business 1870 to 1914: 2. First steps 3. Deutsche Bank and American electrification 4. The Northern Pacific bankruptcy saga 5. The fallout 6. Other transportation and commercial investments 7. A taste for start-ups 8. Transitions Part II. Deutsche Bank and the US During 'Great Disorder' - 1914-57: 9. Personal, communication, and financial breakdowns 10. War supplies, espionage, and expropriation 11. Salvaging assets and business prophets in the war's immediate aftermath 12. Deutsche Bank and reestablishing financial flows 13. Deutsche Bank and the collapse of the fragile world economic order 14. Second Phoenix Part III. Renewal and Re-entry - 1957-2000: 15. Divisive issues and the making of a new financial landscape 16. From Abs to Kopper and from joint ventures to branching 17. Bankers' trust 18. Postscript: Deutsche Bank in the US and the future of multinational banking.
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