Financial markets and institutions, 7th ed.
What’s New in the Seventh Edition In addition to the expected updating of all data through 2010 whenever possible, there is major new material in every part of the text. The Global Financial Crisis The global financial crisis of 2007–2009 has led to a series of events that have completely chang...
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Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Prentice Hall
2020
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Online Access: | http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/jspui/handle/123456789/15383 |
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Summary: | What’s New in the Seventh Edition
In addition to the expected updating of all data through 2010 whenever possible,
there is major new material in every part of the text.
The Global Financial Crisis
The global financial crisis of 2007–2009 has led to a series of events that have completely
changed the structure of the financial system and the way central banks operate.
This has required a rewriting of almost the entire textbook, including a new
chapter, a rewrite of one whole chapter, and addition of many new sections, applications,
and boxes throughout the rest of the book. New Chapter 8: “Why Do Financial Crises
Occur and Why Are They So Damaging
to the Economy?”
With the coming of the subprime financial crisis, a financial markets and institutions
textbook would not be complete without an extensive analysis of financial crises like
the recent one. Using an economic analysis of the effects of asymmetric information
on financial markets and the economy, this new chapter greatly expands on the discussion
of financial crises that was in the previous edition to see why financial crises
occur and why they have such devastating effects on the economy. This analysis is
used to explain the course of events in a number of past financial crises throughout
the world, with a particular focus on explaining the recent financial crisis. Because the
recent events in the financial crisis have been so dramatic, the material in this chapter
is very exciting for students. Indeed, when teaching this chapter after I returned
to Columbia, the students were the most engaged with this material than anything else
I have taught in my entire career of over 30 years of teaching.
Reordering of Part 6, “Financial Institutions,”
and Rewrite of Chapter 18, “The Economic
Analysis of Financial Regulation”
In past editions, the chapter on the structure of the banking industry was followed
by the chapter on banking regulation. This ordering no longer makes sense in the
aftermath of the recent financial crisis, because nonbank financial institutions, such
as investment banks, have for the most part disappeared as free-standing institutions
and are now part of banking organizations.
To reflect the new financial world that we have entered, we should first discuss
the financial industry as a whole and then look at the specifics of how the now more
broadly based banking industry is structured. To do this, we have moved the chapter
on regulation to come before the chapter on the structure of the banking industry
and have rewritten it to focus less on bank regulation and more on regulation of
the overall financial system.
Compelling New Material on the 2007–2009
Financial Crisis Throughout the Text
The recent financial crisis has had such far-reaching effects on the field of financial
markets and institutions that almost every chapter has required changes to reflect
what has happened. A large amount of substantive new material on the impact of
the financial crisis has also been added throughout the book, including:
• A new “Case” on the subprime collapse and the Baa-Treasury spread
(Chapter 5)
• A new “Mini-Case” on credit-rating agencies and the 2007–2009 financial crisis
(Chapter 7)
• A new “Inside the Fed” box on Federal Reserve lender-of-last-resort facilities
during the 2007–2009 financial crisis (Chapter 10)
• A new section on lessons from the financial crisis as to how central banks
should respond to asset price bubbles (Chapter 10) • A new section on the role of asset-backed commercial paper in the financial
crisis (Chapter 11)
• A new section on the subprime financial crisis and the bailout of Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac (Chapter 12)
• A new section on credit default swaps and their role in the financial crisis
(Chapter 12)
• A new section on the subprime financial crisis and the stock market
(Chapter 13)
• An expanded coverage of mortgage pass-through securities that relates collateralized
mortgage obligations to subprime mortgages and to the financial
crisis (Chapter 14)
• A new section on the real estate bubble (Chapter 14)
• A new “Case” on the financial crisis and the dollar (Chapter 15)
• A new “Case” on how a capital crunch caused a credit crunch in 2008
(Chapter 17)
• A new section on the Dodd-Frank bill and future regulation (Chapter 18)
• A new “Mini-Case” on mark-to-market accounting and the financial crisis
(Chapter 18)
• A new “Mini-Case” on the financial crisis and consumer protection regulation
(Chapter 18)
• A new “Mini-Case” on the money market mutual fund panic of 2008
(Chapter 19)
• A new “Mini-Case” on the demise of large, free-standing investment banks
(Chapter 19)
• A new section on the impact of credit default swaps on the insurance industry
and the bailout of AIG (Chapter 21)
• A new “Case” on lessons from the subprime financial crisis: when are financial
derivatives likely to be a worldwide time bomb (Chapter 24). |
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