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University of California Press

About the Book

A former hedge fund worker takes an ethnographic approach to Wall Street to expose who wins, who loses, and why inequality endures.
 
Who do you think of when you imagine a hedge fund manager? A greedy fraudster, a visionary entrepreneur, a wolf of Wall Street? These tropes capture the public imagination of a successful hedge fund manager. But behind the designer suits, helicopter commutes, and illicit pursuits are the everyday stories of people who work in the hedge fund industry—many of whom don’t realize they fall within the 1 percent that drives the divide between the richest and the rest. With Hedged Out, sociologist and former hedge fund analyst Megan Tobias Neely gives readers an outsider’s insider perspective on Wall Street and its enduring culture of inequality.
 
Hedged Out dives into the upper echelons of Wall Street, where elite white masculinity is the standard measure for the capacity to manage risk and insecurity. Facing an unpredictable and risky stock market, hedge fund workers protect their interests by working long hours and building tight-knit networks with people who look and behave like them. Using ethnographic vignettes and her own industry experience, Neely showcases the voices of managers and other workers to illustrate how this industry of politically mobilized elites excludes people on the basis of race, class, and gender. Neely shows how this system of elite power and privilege not only sustains itself but builds over time as the beneficiaries concentrate their resources. Hedged Out explains why the hedge fund industry generates extreme wealth, why mostly white men benefit, and why reforming Wall Street will create a more equal society.

About the Author

Megan Tobias Neely is Assistant Professor in the Department of Organization at Copenhagen Business School and coauthor of Divested: Inequality in the Age of Finance.

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Table of Contents

Contents

  List of Tables and Figure
  Acknowledgments
  Preface

  Introduction: Hedging In and Out
1 From Financial Steward to Flash Boy
2 Pathways to the Working Rich
3 Getting the Job
4 Inside the Firm
5 Moving Up the Ranks
6 Reaching the Top
7 View from the Top
  Conclusion: Picking Winners and Losers
  
  Methodological Appendix: Studying Up
  Notes
  Bibliography
  Index

Reviews

"A clear-eyed assessment of hedge funds as engines of inequality. . . . Neely’s analysis is on point and fair-minded. Finance industry workers and those aspiring to join the industry should consider it essential reading."
Publisher's Weekly
"Beautifully written and a page turner. . . . The analysis is also skilfully interwoven with observations and interviews, making it accessible and embodied by real flesh-and-blood characters."
British Journal of Sociology
“Megan Tobias Neely uses rigorous social science and clear prose to pull back the curtain on the hedge fund industry and grapple with the ugliness of today’s inequality, all the while offering us hope by suggesting pathways to transformation.”—Shamus R. Khan, Professor of Sociology and American Studies, Princeton University, and author of Privilege: The Making of an Adolescent Elite at St. Paul’s School
 
“Provides an in-depth view of the social world of hedge funds, with cutting edge interview and ethnographic data. Ambitious in scope and a page turner.”—Kimberly Kay Hoang, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Chicago, and author of Dealing in Desire: Asian Ascendancy, Western Decline, and the Hidden Currencies of Global Sex Work
 
“This book will add to our understanding of elites and high-status groups in society.”—Adia Harvey Wingfield, Mary Tileston Hemenway Professor of Arts and Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, and author of Flatlining:Race, Work, and Health Care in the New Economy
 
"Megan Tobias Neely unleashes the power of her ethnographic skills against the traders and managers of the hedge fund industry, a tribe that manages to be curiously unenriched by its money."—James K. Galbraith, Professor of Government, University of Texas at Austin

Awards

  • SASE Alice Amsden Best Book Award 2023 2023, Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics