Interview With Financial Writer Les
Leopold
1.
Why
did you write How to Make a Million
Dollars an Hour (J. Wiley and Sons, January 2013)? When I was researching my last book I came
across some amazing figures on how much hedge fund managers earned. At first,
these numbers in the billions of dollars seemed like abstractions. But then I
started to put them into spreadsheets. The numbers were so large that I had to
come up with comparisons and breakdowns to make sense of them. The first one I
looked at closely blew my mind. The top hedge fund guru in 2010, John
Paulson, earned as much in one HOUR as the average family did in 47 YEARS! Mother
of god! One hour = 47 years? How is that possible? That took me in three
directions: How much richer are these guys that even the richest movie stars
and athletes? How do the hedge fund elites earn so much? And assuming
there is some connection between what you earn and what you produce for the
economy, what possible justifications are there for all that income? That
quickly turned into "How to Make a Million dollars an Hour."
2.
What
is the take-away message from your book? Wall Street is totally out of control. You can't make that much
money without harming the economy and violating just about every ethical
standard you can think of -- (and the book provides chapter and verse about
each of these corrupt moves.) As result, the sane and rational move for
all of us, is to dramatically limit the size of Wall Street. (See next
question.)
3.
What
can be done to regulate Wall Street or hedge funds? I think it's foolish to try to micro-manage
them. We need two broad policies that are simple in concept but very difficult
to enact: 1) We need to limit the size of all financial firms so that
they no longer are "too-big-or-complicated-to fail." Banks and
hedge funds are entwined. Both need to be drastically reduced in
size. We must institute e a small financial transaction tax on every kind
of financial instrument. This would put an end to high frequency trading and
make it more difficult for hedge funds and large banks to consistently game the
system. (10 countries in Europe are already moving in this direction.)
4.
Where
do you see the financial markets heading this year? The fact that someone asks me a question like
this shows how screwed up Wall Street really is. I'm not an investment adviser.
I don't invest at all (although my 18 year-old son bought two shares of
Google last year and is doing very well. He refused to touch Apple. Maybe talk
with him.) But I can tell you this. Whether markets go up or down, many,
many hedge fund managers and bankers are going to haul in a lot of money this
year without producing any value at all for the economy.
5.
What
are the rewards and challenges of researching and writing this book? I'm very, very lucky. I love to write and
I love researching new books. Once a publisher lets me go, it's a joy. There
are two very hard parts. The first is getting close to the subject. Could I get
financial folks to level with me? Can I line up the interviews? etc. The
second is marketing. It's hard to get the space in the media to talk
about books. So marketing takes a lot of effort.
6.
Any
advice to a struggling writer? Just keep writing. I wrote my first book without a book contract
or agent. I didn't even try to sell it until it was entirely written. I had
never done anything like it before. I was stunned by how much I liked it.
So I guess my advice is this -- only try to be a writer if you really
love the process of writing -- from the first draft to having editors hack up
your stuff and learning from it. If you sell books too, that's a bonus.
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Brian Feinblum’s views, opinions, and ideas expressed in this
blog are his alone and not that of his employer, the nation’s largest book
promoter. You can follow him on Twitter @theprexpert and email him at brianfeinblum@gmail.com. He feels more important when discussed in the third-person.
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