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4.1
60 reviewsBelieve it or not, investment banking affects you.
You may not live in Manhattan, under the shadow of the giant skyscrapers of Goldman Sachs
and Morgan Stanley. You may not even be involved in the financial industry —
your only dealings with a bank may be when you stop to take money out of the
ATM.
But investment banking is so much a part of the financial system that, whether you
realize it or not, you fall into its shadow. The fact of the matter is, if
you’re like most people, managing your money is falling increasingly on your
shoulders. Gone are the days when you could work at a company for 40 years and
expect to have a fat pension waiting for you in retirement.
Today, managing your money and making sure you have enough to pay for life’s biggest
investments — including homes, cars, college, and retirement — is up to you.
You can’t do it alone, though. Stuffing your money into a box and burying it in
the backyard definitely won’t cut it. If the termites don’t eat up your life’s
savings, inflation will. Each year, prices for goods and services rise, eroding
the power of your savings.
The only way to keep up with the ravages of inflation is to invest your money. And that’s
where Main Street usually becomes acquainted with Wall Street. Main Street has
money in search of returns, and Wall Street is busy cooking up financial investments
that it says will deliver those returns.
Typically, investment banking is a pretty heady topic that’s discussed in MBA classes or
in important-sounding books with long and intimidating titles. But in Investment
Banking For Dummies, we break down the topic into understandable pieces.
Keep in mind that this book, like all the books in the For Dummies series, doesn’t have
to be read cover-to-cover (although we’ll be flattered if you read it all).
Each of the topics is broken down into easy-to-digest parts and chapters. Feel
free to skip around the book to areas that interest you most, and save the
parts that seem irrelevant until