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Greed is good: Revisiting wolves of the Wall Street

Driven by a lust for lucre and the desire to succeed at all cost, many cowboys of Wall Street blazed their way to glory through fraudulent means, only to burn out in the end.

January 06, 2014 / 09:33 IST
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Kankana Roy Choudhury

Moneycontrol.com

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"The only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about," said Oscar Wilde. This is particularly true of financial markets, where there is no clear dividing line between fame and notoriety. Driven by a lust for lucre and the desire to succeed at all cost, many cowboys of Wall Street blazed their way to glory through fraudulent means, only to burn out in the end.

Martin Scorsese's latest movie, The Wolf of Wall Street starring Leonardo DiCaprio is one such case. It is based on the true story of Jordan Belfort. In 1987, Belfort (DiCaprio) becomes a stockbroker at an established Wall Street firm. On the recommendation of his boss, Mark Hanna (Matthew McConaughey), Belfort adopts lifestyle of drugs and prostitutes to succeed. He passes the Series 7 Exam and earns his broker's license, only to lose his job when the firm fails after Black Monday.