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The Bank Credit Analysis Handbook: A Guide for Analysts, Bankers and Investors (Wiley Finance) | 
enlarge | Author: Jonathan Golin Publisher: Wiley Category: Book
This item is no longer available
Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 2052704
Media: Hardcover Edition: 2 Pages: 800 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.2 Dimensions (in): 9.5 x 6.3 x 1.4
ISBN: 0470821574 Dewey Decimal Number: 332 EAN: 9780470821572 ASIN: 0470821574
Publication Date: August 15, 2008
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description The handbook of theory and practice in bank credit analysis and ratings, fully updated and revised The Bank Credit Analysis Handbook, Second Edition explains the role and methodologies of bank credit analysts, giving both investors and practitioners an insider's perspective on how rating agencies assign all-important credit ratings to banks. Updated for today's environment of increased oversight and calls for transparency, it includes international case studies of bank credit analysis; suggestions and insights for understanding and complying with the Basel Accords; techniques for reviewing asset quality on both quantitative and qualitative bases; studies of the restructuring of distressed banks, bank rating types and symbologies; and more. Charts, graphs, and spreadsheet illustrations help tie together the issues discussed throughout the text.
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| Customer Reviews:
A good book for a first insight in banks' financial analysis September 24, 2004 Dr. F.Pasiouras (Greece) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I bought this book 3 years ago, when I started by PhD. At that time I knew nothing about banks' financial statements analysis and the book consequently become as it says a "Guide", in my early steps in the topic. I still go back from time to time to re-read some issues. Thus, I would recommend the book to those interesting in getting a first insight into banks' financial analysis. They will find the first 14 chapters quite useful. Chapters 15-27 examine other issues, such as the environment, distressed banks in Asia, the rating industry among others. How useful the later can be highly depends on what the reader is looking for.
BEWARE June 24, 2004 Bruce J. Downey (Boise, ID) 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
The content of the Bank Credit Analysis Handbook is actually quite good. However, it is glaringly apparent that NO ONE proofread the manuscript. There are errors on almost every other page: missing punctuation (incuding periods), the same phrase back-to-back, incorrect formulas, formulas described one way, and then shown in a way nowhere close to the description. I have an MBA, and have read my share of textbooks and manuals, and I have NEVER come across one as sloppily edited as this one.The content of the book is good, but at $105 one would think someone would have proofread the manuscript before it was published.
A Creditable Analysis October 29, 2001 R. Fox 18 out of 19 found this review helpful
Mr. Golin has written an easily readable and comprehensive guide to an obscure subject. He assumes only a general knowledge of finance and takes the user step-by-step through the analysis of a bank's financial statements, an approach that probably makes this book as useful to equity analysts as it should be to credit analysts of financial institutions. He has a rare perspective, that of an american lawyer (from Harvard Law School) who has grappled with investment analysis of corporations in south east Asia. As a result, many of the examples in the long section on distressed banks are drawn from the Asian economic crisis. Nevertheless the scope of the work is global. He deals with the continuing development of world-wide bank regulation and the role and function of rating agencies. Last, but not least, the appendices contain useful definitions and a good bibliography. For analysts of finanical institutions his book should be a 'strong buy'.
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