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Friday, February 8, 2008

Global macroeconomic arbitrage

Some of the most successful and well-known hedge funds have long profited from a trading strategy that applies macroeconomic views to global markets: global macro.
Pioneered by hedge fund managers such as George Soros and Julian Robertson, this strategy has led to enormous profits. By placing directional bets on liquid assets, it is particularly suited for trending markets.

In Macro Trading and Investment Strategies: Macroeconomic Arbitrage in Global Markets, Gabriel Burstein defines and rigorously analyzes this investment style. He then proposes macro arbitrage as an original alternative to trading subjective macroeconomic views at times when markets are either trending or are extremely volatile, lacking direction, and in crisis, such as during the Asian, Russian, and Latin American economic and financial collapses of the late 1990s.

Macro arbitrage is introduced as a new, lower-risk, long/short macro strategy that is based on detect ing objective macroeconomic mispricings in global markets. Burstein shows how this strategy works in stock market sector spreads (food retailers/general retailers, banks/utilities), stock index spreads (Italy/Spain, Sweden/Finland), and with the European Monetary Union (EMU) ahead of its 1999 single-currency final stage.

In Macro Trading and Investment Strategies, Dr. Burstein presents, with examples, the framework for traditional global macro strategies, then shows how to use macroeconomic mispricings in global financial markets to design innovative global macroeconomic arbitrage strategies for trading and investing.

Packed with revealing trading case studies, examples, explanations, and definitions, this comprehensive work covers:
1. Global directional macro, long/short macro, and macroeconomic arbitrage trading and
investment strategies
2.Causes of macroeconomic mispricings in markets; tackling secondary macroeconomic variables in trades
3.The importance of technical timing in macro arbitrage
4.Volatility of macro arbitrage strategies versus volatility of relative-value strategies
5.Mispricing opportunities due to the effect of the Asian crisis on global markets
6.Macro arbitrage of the EMU convergence mispricing in equity markets
7.Mispricings of retail sales, GDP, industrial production, interest rates, and exchange rates in stock markets

In-depth and timely, Macro Trading and Investment Strategies covers an area of intense interest to today's trading and investment community and shows new opportunities. It is invaluable reading for those seeking new ways to tackle today's volatile global markets.

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