- Published: 13 June 2023
- ISBN: 9780241987971
- Imprint: Penguin General UK
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 352
- RRP: $30.00
Trillions
How a Band of Wall Street Renegades Invented the Index Fund and Changed Finance Forever











- Published: 13 June 2023
- ISBN: 9780241987971
- Imprint: Penguin General UK
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 352
- RRP: $30.00
Trillions is both entertaining and educational. Wigglesworth explores one of the most important modern-day financial innovations and explains its broad impact on financial markets, investors, global economies and even capitalism. A terrific read and a topic that will become more important as passive investments increasingly dominate markets. Wigglesworth brings what could be a dull topic to full life
Gregory Zuckerman, special writer at the Wall Street Journal and author of The Man Who Solved the Market
As only the incomparable Robin Wigglesworth could do, in Trillions he turns the often obscured history of the investment industry into a rollicking great yarn, replete with admirable heroes, political infighting, fascinating diversions and unexpected triumphs
William Cohan, special correspondent at Vanity Fair and author of The Last Tycoons
Very few writers can tell a great story and help us understand a big idea. Robin Wigglesworth is one of those rare journalists who can. His history of the index fund is required reading for anyone who wants to know where the financial markets have come, and where they are going. It's also just a wonderfully engaging romp through the last half century of market news
Rana Foroohar, global business columnist at the Financial Times and author of Don't Be Evil
This is a tour de force. Passive investing has become a bedrock of finance but very few investors understand where and how this practice emerged from and how it is changing markets in a way that impacts us all. Wigglesworth has turned this arcane tale into an easy-to-understand and fun read, full of lively characters and little known details of how finance really works today. Anyone who wants to understand modern investing should read it
Gillian Tett, chair of the editorial board and US editor-at-large at the Financial Times and author of Fool's Gold
A real tour de force, this engaging and thought-provoking book brings together several historical threads - from Warren Buffett's famous hedge fund bet to the 'Manhattan Project of financial economics' - to show how passive investing and index funds have evolved into an ETF phenomenon that has 'humble[d] the investment industry ... reshape[d] finance forever,' and now poses risks for future financial stability and economic wellbeing
Mohamed El Erian, Chief Economic Adviser of Allianz and author of When Markets Collide
The greatest change in investing in the last 100 years is brought to life like never before. A page turner!
Fred Grauer, former CEO of Wells Fargo Investment Advisors
Robin Wigglesworth is one of the most lucid and exciting journalists writing about finance today. Trillions tackles the enormous changes that have swept the investing world through the stories of its charismatic innovators. It's a fascinating journey and a crucial book for anyone trying to understand the financial markets
Bradley Hope, writer at Project Brazen and author of Billion Dollar Whale
The simplest, humblest ideas are sometimes the ones that turn the world upside down. Grab some popcorn and take a front row seat, because Robin Wigglesworth has an astonishing story to tell you
Tim Harford, author of How to Make the World Add Up
A fascinating account of an investment revolution. Trillions should be read not just by millionaires, billionaires and trillionaires, but by anyone who has a pension plan, individual savings account or money invested, directly or indirectly, in the stock market
Ian Fraser, Literary Review
A magisterial, delightfully written history offering up portraits of the academic scribblers and entrepreneurial practitioners who created the index-fund revolution. It also contains common-sense wisdom that will benefit all investors.
The Wall Street Journal
Wigglesworth has written an important book. Passive has mostly been a boon, but its impact in future may not be so benevolent. Investors, companies and regulators need to apprehend the water they are swimming in
Patrick Hosking, Financial Editor of The Times
Paul Volcker once quipped that the greatest innovation in finance in recent decades was the humble ATM. Not so, argues the FT global finance correspondent who makes the case for the index fund as the instrument that democratised investing, upended established structures and changed capitalism. Told through the stories of the group of radical nerds who made it all happen
Best books of 2021, Financial Times