The Zeroes: My Misadventures in the Decade Wall Street Went Insane

Author:   Randall Lane
Publisher:   Penguin Putnam Inc
ISBN:  

9781591843290


Pages:   357
Publication Date:   19 August 2010
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
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The Zeroes: My Misadventures in the Decade Wall Street Went Insane


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Overview

"""As eight sets of boxers slugged through the night, traders and bankers streamed toward Hammerstein, unfurling rolls of hundreds in hopes of charming the check-in girls and buying their way into the capacity event. Via text messages and cell phone calls, The Word had gone out: Wall Street was celebrating tonight. ""The past month had seen the Dow Jones Industrial Average surge past 14,000 points for the first time. These guys were making fortunes by creating securities more complicated than the Rosetta stone and also far more valuable. For these guys---my guys, for better or worse---all was right and just with the world. ""No one had yet developed a name for this era, this decade with the once-a-millennium calendar quirk of two zeroes perched in the middle. As I gazed across the room in front of me, 'the Zeroes' seemed fairly spot-on. Wall Street's breathless pursuit of zeroes, that easy-money mentality, had permeated every aspect of our culture. In my role as Wall Street's scorekeeper, I too had fallen prey to the mind warp. ""But I had no inkling that, when the figures were tallied at the end of 2009, there would be zero median income growth. Zero stock market appreciation. Or that the global economy, imperiled by a group of collective zeroes, faced an imminent meltdown that would wipe out millions of people financially---myself included. Given my unique perch, perhaps I should have. But wealth and excess have a blinding effect, especially amid the kind of greedfest that comes along only once every thousand years."" Randall Lane never set out to become a Wall Street power broker. But during the decade he calls the Zeroes. he started a small magazine company that put him near the white-hot center of the biggest boom in history. Almost by accident. A man who drove a beat-up Subaru and lived in a rented walk-up became the go-to guy for big shots with nine-figure incomes. Lane's saga began with a simple idea: a glossy magazine exclusively for and about traders. which would treat them like rock stars and entice them to splurge on luxury goods. Trader Monthly was an instant hit around the world. Wall Streeters loved the spotlight. and advertisers like Gulfstream. Maybach, and Bulgari loved the marketing opportunity. To accelerate the buzz, Lane's staff threw parties featuring celebrities, premium steaks, cigars, and top-shelf vodka. Nothing was too expensive or too outrageous. Private jets in Napa Valley. Casino nights in London. And $1,000-a-seat boxing matches in New York, where traders from Goldman Sachs and Bear Stearns pounded each other in front of tuxedoed throngs. Before long, Wall Street's rich and powerful trusted Lane as a fellow insider---the guy who could turn an anonymous trader into a cover model and media darling. And the rest of the world sought him out as a way to tap into Wall Street's riches. As he emptied his bank account to help keep his little company afloat, he became a nexus for the absurd. Traders who turned 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina into multimillion-dollar wind-falls. John McCain closing out the craps tables during an all-night gambling binge. Pop artist Peter Max hustling hundreds of thousands of dollars by selling traders almost paint-by-numbers portraits. Al Gore, John Travolta, Moby. Corrupt Caribbean rulers, the mobsters from Goodfellas, the pope. And a retired baseball star turned market guru---Lenny Dykstra---whose rise and fall was a great metaphor for the decade. All played roles in Lane's increasingly surreal world. When the crash of 2008 hit, lane's company and life savings were destroyed along with the high-flying traders and dealmakers his magazines exalted. But Lane walked away with something more lasting; an incredible true story. People will turn to The Zeroes for many years to come to find out what the era was really like."

Full Product Details

Author:   Randall Lane
Publisher:   Penguin Putnam Inc
Imprint:   Portfolio
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.581kg
ISBN:  

9781591843290


ISBN 10:   1591843294
Pages:   357
Publication Date:   19 August 2010
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   No Longer Our Product
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

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Reviews

"""Captivating...the perfect prism to view the larger picture of what was happening across the financial canvas during those sky's-the-limit years."" -""USA Today"" ""An extremely well-written book, a hard-to-put-down cocktail of small business mishaps and gigantic Wall Street egos."" -""Forbes"" ""A circle of characters that could have come straight out of a potboiler...vivid."" -""Bloomberg"" ""Great book!"" -Joe Scarborough, ""Morning Joe"" ""If a hustling Candide had told the story of the Great Wall Street Meltdown, it might read something like this book."" -""The Wall Street Journal"" ""Anyone who wants to understand Wall Street's insanity should read this book."" -""MarketWatch"" ""A delicious, salacious recounting of Wall Street's bloated decade ...marvelously readable."" -""BusinessWeek"" ""Lane makes no excuses for the era. But the color he extracts makes for lively beach reading."" -""Fortune"" ""A remarkable story."" -Forbes.com ""Entertaining."" -""The Financial Times"" ""What Michael Lewis did for '80s traders in Liar's Poker, Randall Lane has now done for trader rock stars of The Zeroes. You will be stunned by the craziness and cautioned by the consequences."" -Jack Covert, 800-CEO-Read ""The stuff of sublime farce that could happen only in a time and place ""when the obscene becomes normal,"" as Lane observes. -Graydon Carter, ""Vanity Fair"" ""Absolutely brilliant."" -Tina Brown"


Captivating...the perfect prism to view the larger picture of what was happening across the financial canvas during those sky's-the-limit years. <br> - USA Today <br> An extremely well-written book, a hard-to-put-down cocktail of small business mishaps and gigantic Wall Street egos. <br> - Forbes <br> A circle of characters that could have come straight out of a potboiler...vivid. <br> - Bloomberg <br> Great book! <br> -Joe Scarborough, Morning Joe <br> If a hustling Candide had told the story of the Great Wall Street Meltdown, it might read something like this book. <br> - The Wall Street Journal <br> Anyone who wants to understand Wall Street's insanity should read this book. <br> - MarketWatch <br> A delicious, salacious recounting of Wall Street's bloated decade ...marvelously readable. <br> - BusinessWeek <br> Lane makes no excuses for the era. But the color he extracts makes for lively beach reading. <br> - Fortune <br> A-


Author Information

"Randall Lane is a journalist and entrepreneur. As CEO and editor-in-chief of Doubledown Media, he founded or relaunched six magazines, including Trader Monthly, Dealmaker, and Private Air. Before that, he cofounded P.O.V. magazine, which was Adweek's ""Startup of the Year."" A National Magazine Award finalist, he was written for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and Slate and is a former Washington bureau chief for Forbes. He is currently editor-at-large at The Daily Beast and lives in New York City with his wife and daughters."

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