Reuters TV | Fast Forward
ADD TO SMART CHANNEL
NEW SMART CHANNEL
-
Wall Street women act like men: author -- Fast Forward
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 10mo ago
-
Breakingviews: JPMorgan director's words should worry shareholders
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 3d ago
-
NEWSMAKER: Liberia must become a manufacturing economy
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 1w ago
-
NEWSMAKER: Liberia will reform land ownership law, education
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 1w ago
-
NEWSMAKER: Liberian stability will bring foreign investment
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 1w ago
-
Behind Russia's "spy" bust
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 1w ago
-
The real question for JPMorgan shareholders
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 1w ago
-
SEC's Walter: "We're putting the market on notice"
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 1w ago
-
How Bush, Obama missed big in the Middle East
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 3w ago
-
Schwarzman, Obama mend fences over job plan for veterans
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 3w ago
-
Consumer web buying spree drives growth - UPS CEO
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 3w ago
-
Gallagher: SEC probing bogus AP tweet that shook markets
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 1mo ago
-
NEWSMAKER: BofE's Mark Carney on challenges to the economy
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 1mo ago
-
NEWSMAKER: Carney on Reinhart/Rogoff: No magic debt level
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 1mo ago
-
NEWSMAKER: Carney on IMF, inflation & how he got his new job
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 1mo ago
-
NEWSMAKER: Carney on Reinhart/Rogoff: No magic debt level
Reuters TV | Fast Forward 1mo ago
Tags
Description
Women who want to make it in the world of high finance have to take on the role of men to get ahead, journalist John Gapper found in researching his latest book, a fictional thriller set in the world of Wall Street. (July 3, 2012)
