Global Focus The book concentrates on key principles that financial professionals, MBAs, and advanced undergraduates - regardless of geography - need to know.
Integration Across Product Types Adopting a financial and trading perspective rather than an economist's viewpoint, the book examines integration across and within all four product types: equities, debt securities, derivatives, and foreign exchange.
Market Microstructure With an exphasis on market microstructure, the book studies prices, risks, and transaction costs of the four product types.
Regular updates of the material in Capital Markets: A Global Perspective are available on the author's website at http://www.people.memphis.edu/~tmcinish/. Capital Markets: A Global Perspective concentrates on principles that financial professionals - regardless of geography - need to know, rather than on local institutional details.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Integration Across Product Types Adopting a financial and trading perspective rather than an economist's viewpoint, the book examines integration across and within all four product types: equities, debt securities, derivatives, and foreign exchange.
Market Microstructure With an exphasis on market microstructure, the book studies prices, risks, and transaction costs of the four product types.
Regular updates of the material in Capital Markets: A Global Perspective are available on the author's website at http://www.people.memphis.edu/~tmcinish/. Capital Markets: A Global Perspective concentrates on principles that financial professionals - regardless of geography - need to know, rather than on local institutional details.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
"Capital Markets: A Global Perspective is a comprehensive and pedagogical textbook that condenses a broad field of finance into an intuitive and readable book. It provides both a conceptual and in-depth understanding of the major fiancial products and the operating structure of various U.S. and foreign capital markets." Norman Moore, University of Connecticut