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Tuesday, February 14th, 2012

Posts Tagged ‘ AXP ’

Ticker Of The Week: American Express (NYSE: AXP)

Apr 27th, 2009 | By Jim Stanton | Category: Stock Market Investing

As you’ve probably noticed, the stock indexes have been rallying for close to seven weeks now. During that period, the major indexes haven’t pulled back from any particular high more than 30% at any given time.



Obama Pushes Credit Card Issuers on Fees, Rates

Apr 27th, 2009 | By Don Miller | Category: Featured

Executives from credit card issuers, including Bank of America Corp. (BAC) and American Express Co. (AXP), met with President Barack Obama last Thursday to make their case against new limits on transfer fees and higher interest rates.



Global Investment News Briefs Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

Feb 18th, 2009 | By William Patalon III | Category: Financial News

Texas Financier Stanford Charged With Fraud; Trump Casinos File for Chapter 11; Amex and Capital One Defaults Rise; WalMart Beats Expectations; Blackberry Execs Pay Back $2.2 Million; Oil Prices Fall Below $35



Fed Counts Bullets, Earnings Dominate Calendar

Jan 26th, 2009 | By Christian Hill | Category: Financial News

There is a full economic calendar this week, but all eyes will be on the two-day FOMC meeting and the rate decision on Wednesday.

It will be interesting to see how the FOMC approaches this meeting. The current Fed Funds target rate is 0-0.25%, which in and of itself is rather strange. It is a moving target, not a fixed rate. Who determines which rate is used? My guess is this meeting will be used to clarify what the rate is. The Fed will either officially reduce it to 0% in a continued effort to resuscitate the economy, or lock it in at 0.25%. This would at least leave the Fed with one perceived bullet in the gun.

The rest of the…



The Global Financial Crisis Will Cost Western Banks a Share of Future China Profits

Jan 15th, 2009 | By William Patalon III | Category: Financial News

In mid November, Bank of American Corp. (BAC) ponied up more than $7 billion to nearly double its already existing investment in the state-owned China Construction Bank Corp., a move that gave the biggest U.S. bank a 19% stake in China’s second-largest lender.



U.S. Automakers, Freddie Mac (FRE) and Foreign Exporters Next in Line for Bailout Handouts

Nov 17th, 2008 | By William Patalon III | Category: Financial News

This week is shaping up to be another active one on the bailout-and-financing front. First and foremost, Congress returns to work this week to consider a once-unthinkable proposal: Put up billions in taxpayer-backed loans so that Detroit’s “Big Three” can be saved. Expect a fight, however, as the bailout debate finally moves past banks to focus on General Motors Corp. (GM), Ford Motor Co. (F), and Chrysler Corp.



12 Thoughts On The Economy In 2012…

Nov 17th, 2008 | By Andy Carpenter | Category: Financial News

As we near the end of the week when IDE editors offer you predictions – and actionable ideas – on the next four years, here are a handful of my thoughts on the world of 2012… assuming, that is, the Mayan thing with 2012 doesn’t come true… something about 12-21-12.

1) Back in 2008, the sky may have been dark, but those who reached for it are 2012’s biggest winners. They were the people who kept feeding their retirement plans and investment accounts… these were people who understand that fear, like euphoria, is a transient emotion.

Of course, the difference between fear and euphoria is that people in the midst of a euphoric event know that it’s likely their joy will eventually become…



A Bill No One Could Possibly Manage

Nov 14th, 2008 | By Adam Lass | Category: Financial News

Charitable as the thought might be, Washington simply doesn’t have deep enough pockets to bail out every deadbeat. Did you really think it would stop at a mere trillion for the banks?



And Then There’s This…Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Nov 13th, 2008 | By Ed Steer | Category: Financial News

On Tuesday, both gold and silver started to decline at one of their usual times…about 3:00 a.m. New York time on Tuesday morning…with the bottom coming at the close of London trading. The price managed to recover somewhat after that…but once again (at 3:00 a.m. New York time on Wednesday morning) gold and silver prices began to decline. There was a temporary bottom at the London close again yesterday, but the recovery was short-lived, and both metals were taken down right into the close of after-hours trading on the Globex.



Paulson’s TARP Revision Spooks The Market

Nov 12th, 2008 | By Andrew Snyder | Category: Financial News

The markets are deep in negative territory again today and investors are not too happy with Henry Paulson. Is he changing the rules in the middle of the game, or is he merely reacting because the game has changed?

Earlier today, the Secretary of the Treasury stood in front of an audience of Wall Street reporters and gave the country an update on the Trouble Asset Relief Program (TARP) and his team’s efforts to shore up the nation’s economy. What he had to say is taking some investors by surprise.

Most importantly, Paulson noted he would not use the TARP to buy the troubled assets of the nation’s financial institutions (like the name of the program implies). Instead, the Treasury Department will…