Banking on global markets : Deutsche Bank and the United States, 1870 to the present
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Banking on global markets : Deutsche Bank and the United States, 1870 to the present
(Cambridge studies in the emergence of global enterprise)
Cambridge University Press, 2012, c2008
- : pbk
Available at 4 libraries
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Note
"First published 2008"--T.p. verso
Includes bibliographical references (p. 459-475) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Banking on Global Markets uses the story of the US business and political dealings of Germany's largest bank to illuminate developments in the ongoing globalization of major financial institutions. Throughout its nearly 140-year-long history, Deutsche Bank served as one of Germany's principal vehicles for forging links with the rest of the world, and the US market probably remained Deutsche Bank's highest foreign priority and its most frustrating challenge. Banking on Global Markets traces Deutsche Bank's involvement with the United States in the context of a changing national and international regulatory and economic environment. It is the story of how international cooperation furthered and conflict hindered those endeavours, and how international banking evolved from a very personalized business between nations to one dominated by enormous transnational markets. Christopher Kobrak weaves together how these financial, political, and institutional developments have helped shape the emerging new international order.
Table of Contents
- 1. Overview of the title and terrain
- Part I. On Golden Chariots - Deutsche Bank's US Business 1870 to 1914: 2. First steps
- 3. Deutsche Bank and American electrification
- 4. The Northern Pacific bankruptcy saga
- 5. The fallout
- 6. Other transportation and commercial investments
- 7. A taste for start-ups
- 8. Transitions
- Part II. Deutsche Bank and the US During 'Great Disorder' - 1914-57: 9. Personal, communication, and financial breakdowns
- 10. War supplies, espionage, and expropriation
- 11. Salvaging assets and business prophets in the war's immediate aftermath
- 12. Deutsche Bank and reestablishing financial flows
- 13. Deutsche Bank and the collapse of the fragile world economic order
- 14. Second Phoenix
- Part III. Renewal and Re-entry - 1957-2000: 15. Divisive issues and the making of a new financial landscape
- 16. From Abs to Kopper and from joint ventures to branching
- 17. Bankers' trust
- 18. Postscript: Deutsche Bank in the US and the future of multinational banking.
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