Roger Lowenstein

Roger Lowenstein is an American financial journalist and writer. He is known for his books on finance and economics, including 'Buffett: The Making of an American Capitalist' and 'When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management'.

This list of books are ONLY the books that have been ranked on the lists that are aggregated on this site. This is not a comprehensive list of all books by this author.

  1. 1. Buffett

    The Making of an American Capitalist

    This book provides an in-depth look at the life and career of one of the most successful and respected investors in history. It chronicles his journey from a young boy fascinated by numbers to becoming the CEO of a multinational conglomerate, highlighting his unique investment strategies, personal philosophies, and the key decisions that led to his unparalleled success in the financial world. Through detailed research and interviews, the biography not only sheds light on his professional achievements but also delves into his personal life, revealing the principles and ethics that guide him both in business and in his philanthropic endeavors. This comprehensive portrait offers valuable insights into the mind of a financial genius, making it a must-read for anyone interested in investment, business, and the story of extraordinary achievement.

    The 14061st Greatest Book of All Time
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  2. 2. When Genius Failed

    The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management

    This gripping narrative delves into the dramatic rise and fall of Long-Term Capital Management, a hedge fund that once dazzled Wall Street with its innovative strategies and Nobel Prize-winning partners. The book meticulously chronicles the firm's meteoric success, driven by complex mathematical models and high-stakes investments, and its subsequent collapse, which sent shockwaves through the global financial system. Through a detailed exploration of the personalities and decisions that led to the fund's downfall, the story serves as a cautionary tale about the perils of overconfidence and the unpredictable nature of financial markets.

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  3. 3. While America Aged

    A detailed investigation of how America’s pension system — both corporate defined-benefit plans and public pensions — became chronically underfunded, tracing the interplay of optimistic actuarial assumptions, risky investment strategies, creative accounting, managerial short‑termism, and political pressures; through case studies and reporting, the book explains how these choices, amplified by market downturns and longer retirements, produced massive unfunded liabilities, strained companies and state budgets, and left retirees and taxpayers exposed, while critiquing the incentives and institutional failures that allowed the crisis to grow.