WM Market Reports
Books Exploring The Ways Of Wealth, Economics And Business
![Books Exploring The Ways Of Wealth, Economics And Business](http://www.wealthbriefing.com/cms/images/app/GENERAL/shutterstock_189988250.jpg)
Here is a selection of books on finance and wealth management that may be of interest to readers.
Over the course of the year your correspondent and colleagues are
sent books about, or potentially relevant to, the global wealth
management industry. Here is a sample of those that caught the
eye.
The Destructive Power Of Family Wealth: A Guide To Succession
Planning, Asset Protection, Taxation and Wealth Management.
Philip Marcovici. Well known to many readers of this news service
and its sister publications, Marcovici has advised financial
organisations, multinationals and families on the domestic and
international aspects of Canadian, Hong Kong and US tax. A member
of the editorial advisory board of WealthBriefing and a
valued source of views, he teaches widely and is part of the
faculty of Singapore Management University.
His book, which runs to 271 pages, addresses head-on the question
of how your wealth can avoid becoming a destructive force for a
family. It examines the psychology of wealth and the effect it
has on different family members. For example, it discusses how to
avoid family strife, protect assets from events such as political
turmoil and divorce, global regulatory changes and looks at the
tools that can be used to protect wealth. (Wiley.)
Fintech Innovation: From Robo-Advisors to Goal Based
Investing and Gamification. By Paolo Sironi. Sironi, who is
a global thought leader for wealth management and investment
analytics at IBM, casts his eye on the burgeoning world of
financial technology, whether the subject is the robo advisor,
artificial intelligence, the use of “gaming” approaches to help
clients understand investments and their own risk tolerances,
across to how fintechs are disrupting the conventional wealth
management players. Sironi crams in a great deal into the 157
pages of the book. It includes an extensive bibliography for
further reading. The book struck the author as an excellent
primer on the fintech landscape and made sense of some of the
mind-bending jargon in this space. (Wiley.)
Engaged Ownership: A Guide For Owners of Family
Businesses. By Amelia Renkert-Thomas. The author founded the
Withers Consulting Group, an international family-business
consultancy and is the former president of Ironrock Inc, her
family’s fifth generation manufacturing business and is the
grand-daughter of the founder of Fisher Price Toys. With Baby
Boomers transferring ownership of privately held firms to their
offspring, this book, running to 200 pages, is most timely.
(Wiley.)
The Essential Advisor: Building Value In The Investor-Advisor
Relationship. By Bill Crager and Jay Hummel. Crager is
president and co-founder of Chicago-headquartered Envestnet, a
16-year-old firm. Hummel is managing director, strategic
initiatives and thought leadership, at the same firm. As the
introduction to the book says, “There is a growing gap in the
investing industry that has left advisors increasingly confused
about what clients want and clients equally confused about what
advisory firms can do for them.” The 204-page book aims to close
that gap. (Wiley.)
Family Capital: Working with Wealthy Families to Manage Their
Money Across Generations. By Gregory Curtis. Curtis is
chairman and founder of Greycourt & Co, a wealth advisory firm
working with families and endowments.
Curtis decides to create an entire case study, using a real
family under the fictional name of the Titan family, chronicling
its rise to riches, and the subsequent struggles and reverses,
and then the story of how the family descendants hired advisors,
took investment and estate planning decisions, and how well or
poorly their achieved their objectives. The 326-page book isn’t a
fast read, but the real dialogue that is relayed (with some
edits), gives the journey of the Titans an immediacy and
freshness that is unusual in the sometimes dry world of
investment books. Curtis makes the issues really come alive
across 11 chapters. In chapter 1, for example, the Titan family
is introduced (it is founded by a poor Italian immigrant); we
then move to the mid-1970s and the terrible stock bear market of
the time, and then fast-forward to 2005 and the actions of the
fifth-generation Titans. The search for an advisor is described;
the challenge of creating an investment policy statement is set
out, and the various twists and turns of the process – including
issues around education and performance reporting – are described
without ever getting mired in jargon. (Wiley.)
Signals: How Everyday Signs Can Help Us Navigate the World's
Turbulent Economy. By Dr Pippa Malmgren. Her 334-page book
takes the reader through many of the controversies of our age,
finding signals that people should attend to that vary from the
design of fashion magazines and the rising price of basic
foodstuffs in Egypt to Russian incursions into the Crimea and
Chinese muscle-flexing in the South China Sea. Dr Malmgren argues
that there was a relatively benign and brief period after the
fall of the Berlin Wall, when geopolitical risk appeared to take
a backseat and academics pronounced on the “end of history”, but
that since 9/11, the financial crash and turmoil in regions such
as the Middle East, talk of history ending seems hubristic, at
least. (Weidenfeld & Nicholson.)
Capital Without Borders: Wealth Managers and the One
Percent. By Brooke Harrington. The book ponders the
question, how do the one percent hold on to their wealth? And how
do they keep getting richer, despite financial crises and the
myriad of taxes on income, capital gains, and inheritance? The
359-page book takes what is a critical look at how advisors
assist high net worth individuals minimise taxes and stay on the
right side of the law. (Harvard University Press.)
Enterprise Risk Management In Finance, by Desheng Dash
Wu and David L Olson. This book, which is technically rigorous
(there are mathematical equations), looks at the kind of risks
firms face (and which need to be understood by investors face:
financial market crashes, natural/man-made disasters,
environmental issues, etc. Desheng Dash Wu is affiliate professor
at RiskLab University of Toronto, senior lecturer at the
Stockholm Business School and he serves as special-term professor
at the Management School, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing.
His co-author is the James & HK Stuart Professor in MIS, and
Chancellor’s Professor at the University of Nebraska. This book
is very much at the technical end of understanding risk
management, rather than for laypersons. The book is 256 pages in
length. (Palgrave Macmillan.)
Practical Operational Due Diligence On Hedge Funds:
Processes, Procedures and Case Studies. By Rajiv Jaitly, who
is managing partner of his eponymous firm, Jaitly LLP, a risk
consultancy. In light of problems that arose like rocks in a
falling tide in the 2008 financial crisis, and which have also
surfaced before and since that year, it is timely for wealth
managers to understand some of the necessary checks that must be
performed before committing money to hedge funds. Jaitly has
worked with regulatory authorities in the UK and held
non-executive directorship roles at funds. This book is chunky at
820 pages. A standout feature is its collection of detailed case
studies going back more than a decade. It contains all manner of
information to show how to spot weaknesses and risks in hedge
funds, as well as signs of those that are likely to be well
managed and deliver for clients. (Wiley.)