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May 16, 2008 12:53:37 AM CDT


Stories related to: Wall Street

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Stories 1 - 20 of 104

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  • May 2008
    • Mood Lightens on Wall St. as Rally Takes Hold

      Mood Lightens on Wall St. as Rally Takes Hold

      Despite economic gloom spreading along Main Street, things on Wall Street are perking up, the New York Times reports—enough that analysts see a glimmer of hope for a turnaround beginning this year. The stock market rebounded almost 11% in recent weeks, junk bonds and other risky securities are rallying. More »

  • April 2008
    • J'Accuse, Part Deux

      J'Accuse, Part Deux

      Economist, writer, actor, and lawyer Ben Stein follows up his December excoriation of Goldman Sachs' contribution to the subprime crisis with a look in today's New York Times into how Wall Street executives can get away with reckless behavior at the expense of the public. This time he targets the SEC, which has been so weakened in the Bush administration it quietly loosened the capital requirements for investment banks and "told Wall Street to police itself to save on regulatory costs."   More »

    • New Hires at Bear Stearns Axed Before They Start

      New Hires at Bear Stearns Axed Before They Start

      Hundreds of college grads who thought they had landed dream positions with Bear Stearns were canned before their first day on the job, the Wall Street Journal reports. As the giant bank began to implode, the students were at first assured their new jobs were safe—but then were sent packing to hunt for work along with 38,000 others recently let go by the financial industry. More »

    • Rosy Q1 for Google

      Rosy Q1 for Google

      Google reported a 30% increase in first-quarter profits today, bettering analysts’ predictions and sending share prices up 17%, Bloomberg reports. Forecasters had assumed that growth in domestic advertising clicks would slow, but Google said it “remains healthy;” a 55% increase in international ad sales gave the search giant the bump it needed to exceed expectations. More »

    • Paydays That Make Even Wall Streeters Blush

      Paydays That Make Even Wall Streeters Blush

      Some Wall Street hedge-fund managers earned billions betting against the market last year, with the top of the class, John Paulson, shaking loose $3.7 billion, the New York Times reports. With the US median family income at $60,500, the booty embarrassed even some of his Wall Street peers. “It’s not illegal,” said Pimco's CIO. “But it’s ugly." More »

    • Volatile Market Hooked on Testosterone

      Volatile Market Hooked on Testosterone

      The buying and selling of the world's wealth is at the mercy of aggressive men and their hormonal fluctuations, neuroscientists have discovered. While that doesn't come as a big surprise, the study isolates the major role that testosterone plays in making boorish traders exceptionally bullish—and the part the hormone cortisol plays in slumps, reports the Daily Telegraph . More »

    • $6B From Outside Investors Will Shore Up Wachovia

      $6B From Outside Investors Will Shore Up Wachovia

      Ailing bank Wachovia will get a $6 billion-$7 billion shot in the arm from outside investors, the Wall Street Journal reports. Specifics of the capital infusion, designed to help the company recover from the credit crisis, haven’t been finalized. Details may be revealed when the company reports first-quarter earnings Monday; it moved the announcement up from Friday without explanation. More »

    • Vulture Investors Circle Wall Street

      Vulture Investors Circle Wall Street

      Like shoppers stalking deals at Filene’s Basement, savvy Wall Street vulture investors are swooping in to find deals among the carcasses of companies and investments felled by the subprime contagion, reports the New York Times . They're betting big—Blackstone Group just raised $10.9 billion from investors to buy distressed real estate—that many companies had to unload good investments in all the chaos. More »

    • Troubled US off the Rails: Poll

      Troubled US off the Rails: Poll

      The vast majority of Americans are pessimistic about the nation's future and believe the problem-plagued US is heading in the wrong direction. More than 80% believe that “things have seriously gotten off on the wrong track.” That's the highest dissatisfaction rate since the New York Times/ CBS News poll began in the early 90s. The grim findings could spell big trouble for Republicans in November. More »

    • Real Estate Slump Strikes Manhattan

      Real Estate Slump Strikes Manhattan

      Manhattan real estate prices hit record highs in the first quarter of 2008, but sales declined, showing that the housing crunch is starting to affect the island, Bloomberg reports. The average price of a Manhattan apartment was $1.7 million, up 33.5% from last year, the New York Times reports, but sales for the same period fell 34%, the most in 18 years. More »

  • March 2008
    • Lehman Is Selling $3B in Shares

      Lehman Is Selling $3B in Shares

      Lehman Brothers is selling $3 billion in new shares to allay fears after its stock dropped 42% this year, Bloomberg reports. "We still maintain that we don't need capital, but we've realized that perception is the dominant issue in today's markets,'' said CFO Erin Callan. Lehman fell up to 48% this month on rumors that it lacked cash and faced a Bear Stearns-style meltdown. More »

    • Treasury Wants Mega-Fed to Monitor Markets

      Treasury Wants Mega-Fed to Monitor Markets

      The Treasury wants a newly empowered Federal Reserve to monitor market stability and swoop in on institutions that threaten it, the New York Times reports. If approved by lawmakers, the Treasury plan would merge a jumble of regulatory agencies and combine the SEC with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. But the plan also reduces or maintains current regulation in many cases—elements sure to provoke battles with Democratic lawmakers. More »

    • Investors Urge Reluctant Fed to Buy Mortgage Debt

      Investors Urge Reluctant Fed to Buy Mortgage Debt

      The best way for the Fed to help reverse the sagging economy is for it to buy some of the $6 trillion in outstanding mortgage-backed securities that have Wall Street so nervous, investors say. The move would ease the credit crunch but put taxpayers at risk. It’s an option the Bush administration has been reluctant to take, reports Bloomberg. More »

    • Lawmakers Gird for Battle Over Wall Street Reforms

      Lawmakers Gird for Battle Over Wall Street Reforms

      Lawmakers are debating how to regulate and oversee financial institutions to prevent another Bear Stearns near-catastrophe. But exactly what that solution should look like depends on who's doing the proposing. President Bush and Wall Street say that Washington's heavy hand could hamstring the industry’s ability to innovate, reports the New York Times. Democratic lawmakers contend it’s time to tighten controls to prevent future meltdowns. More »

    • Hedge Funds Cash In on Collapse of Bear

      Hedge Funds Cash In on Collapse of Bear

      The epic collapse of Bear Stearns didn't mean bad news for everyone on Wall Street—several big hedge funds made a mint off it, the Wall Street Journal reports. The funds essentially placed bets that Bear would stumble, then raked in millions when the security firm's shares took a nosedive. The SEC is investigating to make sure profiteers did not have insider knowledge of the coming collapse. More »

    • Goldman Drops 53%, Beats Analysts' Estimates

      Goldman Drops 53%, Beats Analysts' Estimates

      Goldman Sachs today beat analysts' dire predictions even though it reported a 53% drop in first-quarter profits—the worst falloff since 1999—after a $2.1 billion writeoff, reports Bloomberg. Analysts had expected the Wall Street brokerage to see profits drop more than 60%. Goldman said net income was $1.51 billion, down from $3.2 billion a year earlier. More »

    • Will Lehman Be the Crunch's Next Victim?

      Will Lehman Be the Crunch's Next Victim?

      After a collapse of confidence sank Bear Stearns last week, some traders are betting that Lehman Brothers will be the next victim of the credit crunch. Its stock went on a rollercoaster ride yesterday—plunging 40% at one point and closing down 19%, the biggest fall since the firm went public. But analysts, wary of giving vultures more reasons to circle, are watching what they say about the brokerage firm, Marketwatch reports. More »

    • JP Morgan CEO Emerges as Wall Street Force

      JP Morgan CEO Emerges as Wall Street Force

      JP Morgan Chase CEO James Dimon is a hands-on boss who writes out a detailed to-do list each morning and has managed to keep his company healthy while many of its rivals are ailing or even critically ill, reports the Wall Street Journal. Dimon's focus has been on creating a bank strong enough to withstand any crisis. Investors say he’s succeeded. More »

    • Investors Ask: Who's Next?

      Investors Ask: Who's Next?

      Wall Street, reeling over JP Morgan’s bargain-basement purchase of Bear Stearns, is anxiously watching to see “who’s next” to succumb to the continuing credit squeeze, reports the Financial Times. As investment banks prepare to release first quarter results this week—led by Goldman Sachs and Lehman Brothers tomorrow—the mood is grim. “Short-sellers could have a field day with bank stocks this week,” said one banker. More »

    • JP Morgan Buys Bear Stearns for $2 a Share

      JP Morgan Buys Bear Stearns for $2 a Share

      JP Morgan has agreed tonight to buy Bear Stearns for a scant $2 a share, a bargain-basement price—stock closed at $30 a share—that demonstrates the urgency of staving off the collapse of the venerable investment bank and widespread panic in financial markets, the AP reports. The Bush administration and Federal Reserve have reportedly approved the all-stock sale, which was rushed today under federal oversight to avoid Stearns filing for bankruptcy, the New York Times reports. More »

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