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Artificial Portfolios: The Institutional Deception of Window Dressing. Manipulation, Metrics, and the Subconscious Manipulation of Quarter-End Equity Reporting in Modern Wall Street
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- Nombre de pages183
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-46918-5
- EAN9783565469185
- Date de parution01/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille760 Ko
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
Have you ever wondered how prestigious mutual funds magically manage to display portfolios full of high-performing, winning stocks in their quarterly reports, despite the market suffering a massive downturn? The answer is not brilliant investing; it is a highly deceptive, perfectly legal institutional practice known as window dressing.
As the end of a financial quarter approaches, fund managers face intense pressure to look competent to their clients.
To hide their mistakes, they quietly dump their losing, embarrassing stocks and use the capital to buy high-flying, popular companies right before the reporting deadline. The client receives a beautiful, polished snapshot showing a portfolio full of winners, completely ignorant of the fact that the fund held bleeding losers for the previous eighty-nine days. This sharp financial autopsy deconstructs the illusion of institutional competence.
It explores the massive hidden transaction costs passed on to the consumer, the resulting artificial surges in popular tech stocks at the end of every quarter, and the deep agency problems within wealth management. See through the polished reports of Wall Street. Understanding window dressing provides the ultimate analytical defense against the deceptive, ego-driven mechanics of the global asset management industry.
To hide their mistakes, they quietly dump their losing, embarrassing stocks and use the capital to buy high-flying, popular companies right before the reporting deadline. The client receives a beautiful, polished snapshot showing a portfolio full of winners, completely ignorant of the fact that the fund held bleeding losers for the previous eighty-nine days. This sharp financial autopsy deconstructs the illusion of institutional competence.
It explores the massive hidden transaction costs passed on to the consumer, the resulting artificial surges in popular tech stocks at the end of every quarter, and the deep agency problems within wealth management. See through the polished reports of Wall Street. Understanding window dressing provides the ultimate analytical defense against the deceptive, ego-driven mechanics of the global asset management industry.



