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King of the Club: Richard Grasso and the Survival of the New York Stock Exchange (Hardcover)
by Charles Gasparino
Category:
Financial market, Wall Street, Biography |
Market price: ¥ 278.00
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¥ 248.00
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Author: Charles Gasparino
Publisher: Collins
Pub. in: November, 2007
ISBN: 006089833X
Pages: 400
Measurements: 8.9 x 6.4 x 1.4 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BA01144
Other information: ISBN-13: 978-0060898335
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- MSL Picks -
If you ever saw the enigma that was Dick Grasso, at once a brilliant showman, a hero after 9/11 and yet someone who's insecurity helped play a major role in his demise, this book is a must read.
Charlie Gasparino tells this captivating story in a way that makes you feel as though you are "live and in person." You can almost see Grasso's every grimmace, hear his every word. Thoroughly researched by someone who knows how to do his homework, "King of the Club" is a birdseye view of the turbulence, angst and greed that ran rampant at the highest levels of the Big Board.
In addition to the character studies and inside look at the people and players at the NYSE as it faced technological change, regulatory scrutiny and the ups and downs of the market, Gasparino chronicles the people and the times that were the backdrop for 9/11, arguably the most severe crisis to face Wall Street since the crash of '29.
If you are an investor, a history buff, a CNBC viewer or just someone who likes a good story, well told, this is the book for you.
(From quoting BizNewzPro, USA)
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Charles Gasparino is a correspondent for CNBC and a former writer for the Wall Street Journal and Newsweek. A graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism, Gasparino was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in beat reporting in 2002 and won the New York Press Club Award for best continuing coverage of the Wall Street research scandals. He lives with his wife in New York City.
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From Publisher
A Long Way to the Top
Rags-to-riches stories abound in American lore, but even Horatio Alger would have been hard-pressed to write one as powerful as Richard Grasso's: the son of a working-class family whose childhood dream was to become a cop, he grew up in New York City's outer boroughs, as far removed from the marble halls, expensive suits, and imported cigars of the New York Stock Exchange as if his grandparents had remained in Italy.
Here is the riveting story of how the Little Man in the Dark Suit rose to become the most influential CEO in the Exchange's history. Minus the tony upbringing, affluent prep schools, or inside connections that were de rigueur for top Wall Street players, Grasso would master the subtle deal-making and politics necessary to succeed in the most competitive business on Earth.
The Day the Market Fell
The story of September 11, 2001 - the shock, panic, resilience, and heroism - is one that's been told many times. But on that day, Richard Grasso faced a challenge no other CEO of the Club had ever imagined: how to bring the very heart of global finance back from near-death to functioning operation. Swiftly, completely, and without the public knowing how desperate the struggle really was. He met it with aplomb: his finest hour, and yet one that sowed the seeds of his own destruction.
A Plutocrat's Pay
As the Exchange leapt from success to success, and Grasso's reputation, already gold-plated following 9/11, grew with it, the Club's Board of Directors lavishly rewarded him with a pay package that even the CEOs at the world's largest corporations might envy: more than $140 million in deferred compensation. It was a package that, when leaked, brought down a hailstorm of protest; bitter divisions among the most powerful names on Wall Street; an investigation from the Scourge of Wall Street, then - Attorney General Eliot Spitzer; and Grasso's eventual humiliating downfall.
The End of an Era
Almost single-handedly, Grasso had kept the famous specialist system, where human traders matched buy and sell orders, front and center at the Club. As competing camps plotted his downfall, the exchange's fate became clear: without Grasso, it might survive and indeed flourish, but the Exchange, the firms that supplied it with business, and the structures underpinning the movement of money around the country and the globe would never be the same.
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View all 9 comments |
Tunku Varadarajan, Financial Times, USA
<2008-01-25 00:00>
Gasparino [is] a great reporter.... Mr. Grasso's story is spectacular. |
David Weidner, MarketWatch.com, USA
<2008-01-25 00:00>
The detail in which Gasparino describes the boardroom back-stabbing is as thorough and compelling as a reader will find in any book about Wall Street. |
Susan Antilla, Bloomberg News, USA
<2008-01-25 00:00>
Gasparino, a former Wall Street Journal reporter, had excellent access to [Grasso]... This, combined with the author's entree to financial Goliaths such as former Merill Lynch & Co. CEO David Komansky and Home Depot Inc. co-founder Kenneth Langone, steep the book in rich detail... He paints a portrait of the goings-on at NYSE board meetings that only tireless reporting and good connections can provide...The book does a great job at describing Grasso's efforts to market an institution that by many accounts has been on the slow journey to extinction ever since the invention of the microchip.
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The New York Times, USA
<2008-01-25 00:00>
Charles Gasparino...provides a blow-by-blow account of Mr. Grasso's remarkable rise and fall.... At the same time, Mr. Gasparino provides a rare inside glimpse of how financial titans like Henry M. Paulson Jr., the former Goldman Sachs chairman who is now Treasury secretary, conduct their affairs. It is not a pretty picture, but it demands the attention of anyone who cares about capitalism in this country.
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View all 9 comments |
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