Big bets gone bad : derivatives and bankruptcy in Orange County
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Big bets gone bad : derivatives and bankruptcy in Orange County
Academic Press, c1995
- Other Title
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Big bets gone bad : derivatives and bankruptcy in Orange County : the largest municipal failure in U.S. history
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Note
Cover title: Big bets gone bad : derivatives and bankruptcy in Orange County : the largest municipal failure in U.S. history
Bibliography: p. 163-164
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
How can a municipal investment pool, which is supposed to be safe, lose billions of dollars? What are derivatives and how did they contribute to this tragedy? In December 1994, Orange County became the largest municipality in U.S. history to become bankrupt. By borrowing heavily and placing the wrong bets, Orange County Treasurer Robert Citron lost $1.7 billion of Orange County's $7.4 billion investment portfolio. "Big Bets Gone Bad: Derivatives and Bankruptcy in Orange County" is the first detailed description of the Orange County bankruptcy. Author Philippe Jorion, the only professor in Orange County who teaches and researches derivatives, is uniquely placed to understand the technical details of the portfolio and climate in the Orange County municipal government that encouraged the decisions that led to the bankruptcy. "Big Bets Gone Bad" provides an introduction to the U.S. bond market and details Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan's efforts to tighten credit. Its description of the $35 trillion derivatives market makes the losses of Barings Bank, Kashima Oil, West Virginia, and Metallgesellschaft more understandable. "Big Bets Gone Bad" explains what everyone should know about tax monies and public investments. Because nobody likes to lose $1.7 billion.
Table of Contents
Introduction. Robert Citron and His World. Bond Basics. Repos. Damned Derivatives? Structured Notes. Rocket Scientists--It Gets Technical. The Need for Capital. Going Bankrupt. Citrons Strategy (the Repo Man). Suing Wall Street. The Bondholders. Placing Blame. Fallout in the County. Lessons in Risk. Risk and Derivatives. Do We Need Regulation? Conclusions. Epilogue. Bibliography. Glossary of Financial Terms. Index.
by "Nielsen BookData"