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The Motley Fool April 25, 2007 David Lee Smith |
McGraw-Hill Prints a Good One The publisher and information provider displayed strength in all three of its operating segments for the first quarter. Investors, take note. |
The Motley Fool July 25, 2007 David Lee Smith |
McGraw-Hill: Punished for Performance The publisher posts solid numbers, but gets blasted anyway. Is the company still worth investors' attention? |
The Motley Fool December 7, 2006 Emil Lee |
Fool on the Street: McGraw-Hill Poised for Profits Although McGraw-Hill's stock is up 26% over the past year, which makes it less attractive to potential value investors, the S&P engine should continue to chug along for years. |
The Motley Fool January 28, 2008 David Lee Smith |
McGraw-Hill's on a Slide McGraw-Hill's quarterly results were not a page-turner; all three of its units slid lower. |
BusinessWeek May 7, 2007 David Henry |
How The Bad News Could Get Worse If delinquencies lead to downgrades of mortgage-backed securities, ripples could become waves. |
BusinessWeek July 23, 2007 Henry & Goldstein |
The Subprime Mess: "It's Just Going To Get Worse" Many more borrowers could default when ARM rates rise. |
The Motley Fool January 26, 2007 Steven Mallas |
McGraw-Hill's Educated Earnings Recent earnings were just OK, but the publisher's long-term prospects seem intact. |
The Motley Fool October 23, 2006 Anders Bylund |
McGraw-Hill Busts Out the Chainsaw The textbook publisher recently reported earnings, and the market liked what it saw. |
The Motley Fool March 9, 2005 Tom Taulli |
McGraw-Hill Gains Power At age 73, it was time for J.D. Power III to find an exit. In this case, the buyer of the marketing information firm was another renowned family business, McGraw-Hill. But the deal-making means a short-term negative for the publisher. |
BusinessWeek October 1, 2007 David Henry |
Anatomy Of A Ratings Downgrade How S&P and Moody's miscalculated risk on two top-rated pools of mortgage-backed bonds. |
Investment Advisor August 2007 Kathleen M. McBride |
Coming Home to Roost Lurking problems in CMOs, CDOs, and junk dominate this year's Morningstar Investment Conference. |
BusinessWeek November 26, 2007 David Henry |
A Chain Reaction in Shaky Debt? As exotic CDOs topple, the impact could ripple through debt markets and wallop more funds and banks. |
The Motley Fool July 29, 2004 Phil Wohl |
McGraw-Hill Means Business The publishing and financial firm reports strong results for the second quarter. If the company were to be split up, I see the Financial Unit being a strong buy and the Education Unit a hold at best. |
The Motley Fool February 8, 2008 Morgan Housel |
Rating Agencies Begin to Come Clean If any group deserves the most blame for shady practices that gave credence to subprime debt, it might be the rating agencies. |
BusinessWeek July 9, 2007 Goldstein et al. |
Mutually Assured Mayhem Wall Street is on edge, scrambling to buck up Bear Stearns and avert a domino-effect debacle. |
Financial Planning December 1, 2007 Elizabeth O'Brien |
Subprime Truths and Consequences The continuing credit crunch spotlights the perils of leverage. How should your financial advisory clients respond? |
BusinessWeek August 6, 2007 Roben Farzad |
Let The Blame Begin Everyone played some role in the subprime mess - the Street, lenders, ratings agencies, hedge funds, even homeowners. Where does responsibility lie? |
Real Estate Portfolio Sep/Oct 2007 Dees Stribling |
Coming into Focus Mortgage REITs of all stripes tighten their lending practices to improve their outlook going forward. The subprime event may mark a permanent change in the business environment for mortgage REITs, as well as mortgage lenders and investors. |
The Motley Fool September 26, 2011 Dan Radovsky |
S&P Being Taken to the Woodshed The ratings agency will have to answer the SEC's questions about CDO ratings fiasco. |
Finance & Development December 1, 2007 Randall Dodd |
Subprime: Tentacles of a Crisis The mortgage market turbulence is as much about the breakdown of the structure of U.S. financial markets as it is about bad debt. |
BusinessWeek October 15, 2009 Stephen J. Adler |
Editor's Memo Bloomberg LP signed a contract on Oct. 13 to purchase BusinessWeek from The McGraw-Hill Companies. |
Information Today May 23, 2011 Nancy Herther |
McGraw-Hill eBook Library Debuts As Its Etextbook Platform Company officials plan appearances at library-related conferences throughout the coming year to demo the new ebook service, geared to the needs of professional and academic markets. |
Investment Advisor October 2006 Palash R. Ghosh |
Remember To Pay The Mortgage Mortgage-backed securities, a somewhat overlooked, though very large, section of the fixed-income universe, are becoming more attractive to investors in light of a softening housing market and slipping Treasury yields. |
BusinessWeek March 19, 2007 Der Hovanesian & Goldstein |
Who Will Get Shredded? As the subprime business tanks, the pain is spreading to a wide swath of investors. |
Information Today March 4, 2013 Paula J. Hane |
Etextbook Update The etextbook market is in such flux, that it warrants revisiting frequently. This is a review of some recent noteworthy developments and a discussion of a report on student acceptance. |
BusinessWeek June 18, 2007 David Henry |
This Investment Could Turn Ugly The Street wants to get small investors into exotic pools called CDOs. It's a risky game. |
The Motley Fool March 15, 2007 Matt Koppenheffer |
Not a Bearish Quarter for Stearns Bear Stearns announced strong results for its fiscal first quarter. Investors, take note. |
The Motley Fool July 18, 2007 Rimmy Malhotra |
The Anti-Sheep of Subprime How the lessons of Enron apply to the subprime blowout. The sky is indeed falling on companies heavily invested in residential subprime mortgage-backed securities. But the emotion that has gripped this sector presents an opportunity for patient investors. |