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Your macroeconomic edge : investing strategies for executives in the post-recession world / Philip J. Romero.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher number: 2 | BEPSeries: Economics collectionPublisher: [New York, N.Y.] (222 East 46th Street, New York, NY 10017) : Business Expert Press, [2012]Copyright date: �2012Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 electronic text (xvii, 242 pages) : digital fileContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781606493212
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: No titleLOC classification:
  • HC106.84
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Preface: to the reader: Why this book? -- Acknowledgments -- Prologue -- Part I. Why the great moderation, and its bull market, won't return -- 1. Introduction: avoiding Californication -- 2. The fall, rise, and slow crash of California, 1981-2010 -- 3. Your country is getting older, and your government is bankrupt -- 4. Cutting up America's credit card: international demographic trends -- 5. The devil's bargain: inflation for stimulus -- 6. Surprise bailouts: what if I'm wrong? -- 7. Will immigration rescue us? -- Part II. Swimming upstream against the strengthening current -- 8. Hedging against stagflation with commodities, MLPs, REITs, and preferred and high-yield stocks -- 9. Stiffing the tax man with Roth IRAs -- 10. Corporate strategy applications -- Coda. Your money, your future, your vote -- Appendix A. Why the Yuan affects you: a primer on how international economics shapes investment valuations -- Appendix B. Retirement investing 101: an introduction -- Glossary -- Resources -- Business teaching cases related to book chapters -- Notes -- References -- Index.
Abstract: Businesspersons and investors have been conditioned to anticipate that after a period of turbulence following the "Great Recession," conditions will return to "normal." For the preceding generation (from 1982 to 2007), "normal" was the economic "Great Moderation": a period of low inflation and low unemployment that brought on high growth in asset values. Those days are gone. This book reviews the major, and largely inescapable, trends that will make the next generation a more challenging investment environment in all developed economies: an aging population and an overextended government. California today captures the challenges that will be faced by the American economy over the next decades. After summarizing these trends, the book outlines investing strategies for individuals and companies can use this new environment. It provides an extended case study in how greater economic literacy can offer readers an advantage for understanding the opportunities, and threats, presented by long- term trends.
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Preface: to the reader: Why this book? -- Acknowledgments -- Prologue -- Part I. Why the great moderation, and its bull market, won't return -- 1. Introduction: avoiding Californication -- 2. The fall, rise, and slow crash of California, 1981-2010 -- 3. Your country is getting older, and your government is bankrupt -- 4. Cutting up America's credit card: international demographic trends -- 5. The devil's bargain: inflation for stimulus -- 6. Surprise bailouts: what if I'm wrong? -- 7. Will immigration rescue us? -- Part II. Swimming upstream against the strengthening current -- 8. Hedging against stagflation with commodities, MLPs, REITs, and preferred and high-yield stocks -- 9. Stiffing the tax man with Roth IRAs -- 10. Corporate strategy applications -- Coda. Your money, your future, your vote -- Appendix A. Why the Yuan affects you: a primer on how international economics shapes investment valuations -- Appendix B. Retirement investing 101: an introduction -- Glossary -- Resources -- Business teaching cases related to book chapters -- Notes -- References -- Index.

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Businesspersons and investors have been conditioned to anticipate that after a period of turbulence following the "Great Recession," conditions will return to "normal." For the preceding generation (from 1982 to 2007), "normal" was the economic "Great Moderation": a period of low inflation and low unemployment that brought on high growth in asset values. Those days are gone. This book reviews the major, and largely inescapable, trends that will make the next generation a more challenging investment environment in all developed economies: an aging population and an overextended government. California today captures the challenges that will be faced by the American economy over the next decades. After summarizing these trends, the book outlines investing strategies for individuals and companies can use this new environment. It provides an extended case study in how greater economic literacy can offer readers an advantage for understanding the opportunities, and threats, presented by long- term trends.

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