The Greatest Trade Ever: The Behind-the-Scenes Story of How John Paulson Defied Wall Street and Made Financial History is a debut non-fiction book by American journalist Gregory Zuckerman. The book was released on November 3, 2009 by Crown Business. The book investigates the reasons and consequences of the subprime mortgage crisis and the role that hedge fund manager John Paulson played in those events.
Video The Greatest Trade Ever
Overview
In 2006, John Paulson organized Paulson Credit Opportunity Fund that bet against bonds backed by subprime mortgages using credit default swaps. Paulson "shot to fame and fortune" when his investment strategies paid off during the subprime housing market crash. His bet against the subprime mortgage bubble has been called "the greatest trade ever" by Gregory Zuckerman. Paulson's involvement in the Abacus-2007AC1 deals resulted in Goldman Sachs paying a $550 million penalty, the largest ever paid by a Wall Street firm.
Maps The Greatest Trade Ever
Recognition
The Greatest Trade Ever became a New York Times and Wall Street Journal best-seller and has since been translated into nine languages.
See also
- The Big Short, a 2010 book by Michael Lewis
- Credit-default swap
- Collateralised debt obligation
- CDO-Squared
- Synthetic CDO
References
External links
- Profile on Google Books
- Book TV: Gregory Zuckerman, "The Greatest Trade Ever" on YouTube
- John Paulson And The Greatest Trade Ever on YouTube
Source of the article : Wikipedia