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Street Freak

Couverture du livre « Street Freak » de Dillian Jared aux éditions Touchstone
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Résumé:

When Jared Dillian joined Lehman Brothers in 2001, he fulfilled a life-long dream to make it on Wall Street--but he had no idea how close to the edge the job would take him. Like Michael Lewiss classic Liars Poker, Jared Dillians Street Freak takes readers behind the scenes of the legendary... Voir plus

When Jared Dillian joined Lehman Brothers in 2001, he fulfilled a life-long dream to make it on Wall Street--but he had no idea how close to the edge the job would take him. Like Michael Lewiss classic Liars Poker, Jared Dillians Street Freak takes readers behind the scenes of the legendary Lehman Brothers, exposing its outrageous and often hilarious corporate culture. In this ultracompetitive Ivy League world where men would flip over each others ties to check out the labels (also known as the Lehman Handshake), Dillian was an outsider as an ex-military, working-class guy in a Mens Wearhouse suit. But he was scrappy and determined; in interviews he told potential managers that, Nobody can work harder than me. Nobody is willing to put in the hours I will put in. I am insane. As it turned out, on Wall Street insanity is not an undesirable quality. Dillian rose from green associate, checking IDs at the entrance to the trading floor in the paranoid days following 9/11, to become an integral part of Lehmans culture in its final years as the firms head Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) trader. More than $1 trillion in wealth passed through his hands, but at the cost of an untold number of smashed telephones and tape dispensers. Over time, the exhilarating and explosively stressful job took its toll on him. The extreme highs and lows of the trading floor masked and exacerbaed the symptoms of Dillians undiagnosed bipolar and obsessive compulsive disorders, leading to a downward spiral that eventually landed him in a psychiatric ward. Dillian put his life back together, returning to work healthier than ever before, but Lehman itself had seemingly gone mad, having made outrageous bets on commercial real estate, and was quickly headed for self-destruction. A raucous account of the final years of Lehman Brothers, from 9/11 at its World Financial Center offices through the firms bankruptcy, including vivid portraits of trading-floor culture, the financial meltdown, and the companys ultimate collapse, Street Freak is a raw, visceral, and wholly original memoir of life inside the belly of the beast during the most tumultuous time in financial history. In his electrifying and fresh voice, Dillian takes readers on a wild ride through madness and back, both inside Lehman Brothers and himself.

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