Posts Tagged ‘
Troubled Assets ’
Apr 30th, 2009 |
By Contrarian Profits |
Category: Top Story
Why wait for Tim Geithner’s rigged stress test results for banks when the underground can help you separate the winners from the losers? Thanks to research carried out by Money Morning’s Martin Hutchinson, we can pre-empt the Treasury Department and reveal which are the strongest banks are which are most poisonous.
Tags: Bank Stocks, BK, Compensation Structures, Share Price, Stock Price, STT, Tim Geithner, Treasury Department, Troubled Assets, USB
Posted in Top Story |
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Apr 14th, 2009 |
By Martin Hutchinson |
Category: Financial News
One of the most accurate forecasters of the global economic crisis, Nouriel Roubini, said last week that last September’s spree of bank takeovers deepened the crisis because it made the already-too-big banks even bigger.
Tags: AIG, BAC, Bank Stocks, Citigroup, Global Economic Crisis, GS, JPM, Martin Hutchinson, MS, PNC, Troubled Assets, WFC, Xlf
Posted in Financial News |
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Mar 24th, 2009 |
By Martin Hutchinson |
Category: Financial News
For lawmakers who believe that 90% tax rates would be an effective way of punishing the financial malefactors who continue to flourish as the rest of us founder, take careful note: Not only will you punish the innocent as well as the guilty, you could also extinguish the innovative spark we’ll need to eventually make this moribund economy catch fire.
Tags: AIG USB, Income Tax Rates, Martin Hutchinson, TARP, Tax Rate, Troubled Assets, WFC
Posted in Financial News |
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Feb 24th, 2009 |
By Jason Simpkins |
Category: Financial News
Federal officials are discussing the possibility of converting the U.S. government’s preferred shares of Citigroup Inc. (C) to common stock in a move that would boost taxpayers’ stake in the company to 40%, The Wall Street Journal reported.
Tags: AIG, Citigroup, Federal Reserve, FNM, FRE, Jason Simpkins, Nationalization, Regulators, TARP, Troubled Assets
Posted in Financial News |
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Nov 13th, 2008 |
By Jason Simpkins |
Category: Financial News
U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson yesterday (Wednesday) announced a reshaping of the government’s $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. Instead of purchasing troubled assets directly from banks, Paulson said the majority of the funds allotted to the Treasury Department would be used to purchase equity stakes in financial institutions and bolster the consumer credit market.
Tags: AIG, Asset Backed Securities, Bailout Plan, Consumer Finance Companies, Federal Reserve, Hank Paulson, Henry M Paulson, Jason Simpkins, Treasury Department, Troubled Assets, U S Treasury
Posted in Financial News |
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