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No One Would Listen: A True Financial Thriller (2010)

por Harry Markopolos

Outros autores: Ver a secção outros autores.

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3281679,139 (3.89)4
Business. Nonfiction. HTML:

Harry Markopolos and his team of financial sleuths discuss first-hand how they cracked the Madoff Ponzi scheme

No One Would Listen is the thrilling story of how the Harry Markopolos, a little-known number cruncher from a Boston equity derivatives firm, and his investigative team uncovered Bernie Madoff's scam years before it made headlines, and how they desperately tried to warn the government, the industry, and the financial press.

Page by page, Markopolos details his pursuit of the greatest financial criminal in history, and reveals the massive fraud, governmental incompetence, and criminal collusion that has changed thousands of lives forever-as well as the world's financial system.

  • The only book to tell the story of Madoff's scam and the SEC's failings by those who saw both first hand
  • Describes how Madoff was enabled by investors and fiduciaries alike
  • Discusses how the SEC missed the red flags raised by Markopolos

Despite repeated written and verbal warnings to the SEC by Harry Markopolos, Bernie Madoff was allowed to continue his operations. No One Would Listen paints a vivid portrait of Markopolos and his determined team of financial sleuths, and what impact Madoff's scam will have on financial markets and regulation for decades to come.

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Mostrando 1-5 de 16 (seguinte | mostrar todos)
I spent years in accounting, love details and mysteries, so I loved the book. Yes, he is no Steven King, but it was his first book. First-time authors usually have cringe-worthy things in them. I am glad that the world got Harry Markopolos' story first-hand. I hope he writes about more of his whistle-blower stories. ( )
  nab6215 | Jan 18, 2022 |
See also papers in SH Archive Miscellaneous papers.
  LibraryofMistakes | May 19, 2021 |
Madoff, Bernard (Subject)
  LOM-Lausanne | May 1, 2020 |
In December 2008, Bernie Madoff, one of the most respected figures on Wall Street, co-founder and former president of NASDAQ, confessed to running the largest Ponzi scheme in history. On the heels of that revelation, we learned that this fraud had been going on for decades, and then that it was international in reach.

We also learned that there had been a whistleblower, who had warned the SEC a decade earlier, and when he was ignored had continued to investigate, and made additional filings, with additional and more complete information, including the growing size of the fraud.

That whistleblower was Harry Markopolos, and this is his story.
Markopolos was working in an investment firm as a quantitative analyst when a colleague mentioned Bernie Madoff and his unusually consistent and profitable returns on investments. They quickly concluded that Madoff's returns were impossible, and the only question was whether he was running a Ponzi scheme or engaging in "front trading"; using the information on stock trading available to him from his stockbroker business to do trades for his money management business beforehand, benefiting from the knowledge of the effect the other trades would have on the market.

Then they began to uncover the number of feeder funds channeling money into Madoff's care and management. At the time that Markopolos filed his first complaint with the SEC, he and his small crew of friends and helpers estimated the size of his "invested" funds at between three and seven billion dollars--an amount that would have moved the market if Madoff were really making those trades. By the time the 2008 financial crisis forced Madoff's Ponzi scheme into collapse, they estimated the size of his scheme at fifty billion dollars. What they didn't know until more and more of Madoff's victims came forward was that he was also accepting funds directly from individuals, and perhaps as much as $65 billion was involved, and perhaps as many as a million people around the world had suffered major losses, even the loss of everything they owned.

In crisp, clear terms, Markopolos tells the story of how he discovered Madoff's fraud, uncovered the size of it, and repeatedly tried to get the SEC to investigate and shut Madoff down. We see how many people had some understanding that Madoff's returns couldn't be real, but who ignored it because he was so respected, or so big, or, even worse, because his returns were so good. We see Markopolos' growing strain, eventually causing him to leave the financial industry and become a full-time fraud investigator, as well as the effects on the other members of his team. We also see the tragic effects on Madoff's victims and those in the industry who really believed that Madoff couldn't possibly be committing fraud.

Most importantly for the country as a whole, those of us who were not directly affected by Madoff's fraud, we see the incompetence and indolence of the SEC in the face of detailed, compelling, credible information that one of the major players on Wall Street was running a massive fraud. We thought the SEC was protecting us when we invested, and it wasn't. We were utterly without protection. New laws and regulations have been enacted, but there are efforts to roll those back, on the theory that the industry can regulate itself. The Madoff story, taken together with the other frauds, crimes, and reckless gambles that created the 2008 financial crisis and the current Great Recession, prove that it can't.

This is a moving, compelling story, but also an incredibly important one.

Highly recommended.

I borrowed this book from a friend. ( )
  LisCarey | Sep 19, 2018 |
Either Markopolos is a good writer or he had a great ghost, because this was a much better read than I expected it to be. Could have used fewer "The SEC couldn't find ice cream in a Dairy Queen" metaphors but otherwise a compelling story, well-told. ( )
  sblock | Feb 11, 2016 |
Mostrando 1-5 de 16 (seguinte | mostrar todos)
Blank stares, disdain and tears. Harry Markopolos encountered all three during his nine-year struggle to convince the Securities and Exchange Commission that Bernard Madoff’s returns were mathematically impossible. SEC officers didn’t grasp the numbers until the Ponzi scheme had swelled to $65 billion, as Markopolos shows in “No One Would Listen,” a disturbing firsthand account of his quest to expose one of the most powerful men on Wall Street.
adicionada por Shortride | editarBloomberg News, Jamie Pressley (Mar 2, 2010)
 

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(Introduction) On the rainy afternoon of June 17, 2009, David Kotz sat patiently in a small room with a single barred window at the Metropolitan Correction Center, a prison in lower Manhattan, waiting to interview Bernard Madoff, the mastermind behind the greatest financial crime in history.
On the morning of December 11, 2008, a New York real estate developer on JetBlue flight from New York to Los Angeles was watching CNBC on the small seat-back television.
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Business. Nonfiction. HTML:

Harry Markopolos and his team of financial sleuths discuss first-hand how they cracked the Madoff Ponzi scheme

No One Would Listen is the thrilling story of how the Harry Markopolos, a little-known number cruncher from a Boston equity derivatives firm, and his investigative team uncovered Bernie Madoff's scam years before it made headlines, and how they desperately tried to warn the government, the industry, and the financial press.

Page by page, Markopolos details his pursuit of the greatest financial criminal in history, and reveals the massive fraud, governmental incompetence, and criminal collusion that has changed thousands of lives forever-as well as the world's financial system.

The only book to tell the story of Madoff's scam and the SEC's failings by those who saw both first hand Describes how Madoff was enabled by investors and fiduciaries alike Discusses how the SEC missed the red flags raised by Markopolos

Despite repeated written and verbal warnings to the SEC by Harry Markopolos, Bernie Madoff was allowed to continue his operations. No One Would Listen paints a vivid portrait of Markopolos and his determined team of financial sleuths, and what impact Madoff's scam will have on financial markets and regulation for decades to come.

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