PEOPLE - Finding Fault We've been warned. Academic theory, computer advances and human error have conspired to increase, not reduce, the risk in hedge funds. And when the market crashes, the industry will have only itself to blame. By Imogen Rose-Smith April 11, 2007
INSIDE II - Schadenfreudian Slip Schadenfreude is tricky stuff. Wall Street barely had time to savor the travails of erstwhile prosecutor-turned New York governor Eliot Spitzer before most of the world's markets seized up last month. By Michael Carroll September 16, 2007
This content is from: Culture The Unintentional Consequences of Dodd-Frank Two years after the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act was enacted, it may be time to rethink and simplify the regulatory rules. By Jeffrey Kutler August 03, 2012
This content is from: Portfolio A Time for New Regulatory Thinking Too much innovation caused the financial crisis; too little policy innovation followed it. By Jeffrey Kutler September 24, 2014
This content is from: Culture New Models Re-Root Finance in the Real Economy Abstractions in traditional investment models pose potential hazards. Agent-based modeling could be one answer to tempering the danger. By Ashby Monk February 15, 2014
This content is from: Premium A Cautionary Tale A Demon of Our Own Design: Markets, Hege Funds, and the Perils of Financial Innovation. By Richard Bookstaber April 19, 2007