risk management for MBA students

Pixel art poster reading “AGAINST THE GODS” showing a finance scholar holding dice and a scroll between two towering mythic gods, surrounded by risk symbols like probability percentages, charts, coins, and a calculator labeled “RISK.”
Books

Against the Gods Book Review: Peter Bernstein’s Classic Story of Risk, Probability, and Modern Finance

Peter L. Bernstein’s Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk is one of the most important business books ever written because it explains how modern finance became possible in the first place. Rather than starting with markets, Bernstein starts with uncertainty, and traces the intellectual breakthrough that turned the future from “fate” into something humans could measure, price, and manage. For MBA candidates, investors, and business leaders, this book delivers a foundational lesson: risk isn’t a spreadsheet output, it’s the operating system beneath strategy, entrepreneurship, and capital allocation.

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Pixel art poster reading “MANIAS, PANICS AND CRASHES” with three suited figures showing boom-to-bust emotions, a sinking bank building in floodwater, burning debris, and a jagged red market crash arrow in the background.
Books

Manias, Panics, and Crashes Book Review: Kindleberger’s Classic Framework for Bubbles, Leverage, and Financial Crisis

If you want one book that makes financial crises feel less like random lightning strikes and more like a recurring human pattern, Manias, Panics, and Crashes is the best place to start. Originally written by Charles P. Kindleberger and later updated with Robert Aliber, it explains how booms form, why leverage and credit expansion turn optimism into fragility, and how distress becomes full-scale panic once confidence breaks. For MBA candidates and business readers, the value is clarity: it’s a framework for understanding liquidity, institutional behavior under stress, and why “this time is different” shows up right before the fall.

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