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CFO
June 1, 2010
Randy Myers
Ratings Disaster Congress takes another stab at reforming the credit-rating agencies, whose AAA seal of approval helped fuel the subprime crisis. But will any change truly make a difference? mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
HBS Working Knowledge
January 20, 2009
Julia Hanna
Risky Business with Structured Finance Even modest imprecision in estimating underlying risks is magnified disproportionately when securities are pooled and tranched. mark for My Articles similar articles
U.S. Banker
July 2008
Michael Sisk
A `Radical' Answer to Credit-Ratings Conflict The government should remove itself completely from the credit-rating business, stop deciding which company can and can't rate a bond, and stop making institutions pay attention to rating agencies whose work may be shoddy - and, it often turns out, is. mark for My Articles similar articles
CFO
May 1, 2009
Sarah Johnson
Trouble for the Other Big Three? The SEC explores whether new competition for the big credit-rating agencies could make them raise their games. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
December 1, 2007
Jerry Webman
The Credit Crunch A Wall Streeter explains what happened and how the financial markets got into their current state. mark for My Articles similar articles
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? mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
December 2, 2009
Anand Chokkavelu
Morningstar Has a AAA-Rated Plan Morningstar announced today that it's getting into the credit rating business. mark for My Articles similar articles
Investment Advisor
August 2007
Kathleen M. McBride
Subprime As the implosion of subprime mortgages and junk bonds causes uncertainty throughout the markets, advisors and broker/dealer executives may want to think about what's in their clients' portfolios. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
November 5, 2007
Sham Gad
The 1987 Crash -- a Dress Rehearsal? If mortgages continue to deteriorate at such an accelerating pace, the result could make the October 19, 1987 Black Monday Crash seem like a dress rehearsal. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Advisor
November 2007
Mary Rowland
Making Sense Of Chaos The mortgage meltdown has showed the uglier side of investing in dicey loans. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
May 21, 2010
Morgan Housel
Put the Rating Agencies Out of Their Misery Before It's Too Late Once again, raters have proven themselves stuck on stupid. Congress is waking up. Two amendments in the just-passed Senate financial overhaul bill could euthanize the flawed parts of the rating system. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
March 22, 2004
Q&A with Jeffrey Gundlach The co-manager of TCW Galileo Total Return Bond Fund says "by concentrating in mortgages, we have an edge over more diversified funds" mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
December 20, 2007
Dan Caplinger
The Ratings Game The companies that rate bonds look at several factors in rating fixed-income securities. Learn how these ratings work, and don't buy without knowing the facts. mark for My Articles similar articles
CFO
December 1, 2009
Edward Teach
"You Don't Manage by Models." An astute judgment call helped the nation's largest life insurer steer clear of the subprime crisis. An interview with William J. Wheeler, CFO at MetLife Inc. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
May 26, 2009
Morgan Housel
The Most Powerful Companies in the World Allowing one company's actions to have so much influence over the economy is terribly dangerous and never should have happened. But it is still happening, with ratings agencies. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
December 19, 2007
Emil Lee
Lessons From 2007 The last half of 2007 was brutal, and many investors made some bad calls. Although mistakes are tough, the biggest mistake of all would be to ignore them and not learn anything. Let's take a look at what we've learned. mark for My Articles similar articles
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? mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
OCC Bulletin
April 9, 2002
Risk-Based Capital A final rule permits banks to reduce the risk weight on certain claims against qualifying securities firms from 100 percent to 20 percent... mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
December 3, 2009
Matt Koppenheffer
The Greatest Trick the Bankers Ever Pulled How do we get banks to get back to accurately pricing risk? By attacking the problem from multiple angles. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bank Systems & Technology
June 24, 2008
Thompson & Mataconis
Banks Must Rely On Their Own Risk Models in Future Long-term, it's clear that banks will have to provide more transparency into their credit and risk decisions -- and do a lot more of the work themselves. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wall Street & Technology
September 23, 2007
Penny Crosman
Can Financial Models Prevent CDO Problems? Computerized financial models help fund managers at Barclays, Mitsubishi and Point Clear make better decisions. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
December 12, 2007
Sham Gad
E*Trade Bailout Signals Trouble Ahead E*Trade sidestepped bankruptcy when hedge fund Citadel Investment Group purchased some $3 billion of E*Trade's debt. Yet a closer look at the deal reveals some useful insights into the likely future of the mortgage-backed-securities market. mark for My Articles similar articles
CFO
September 1, 2003
Tim Reason
Good to Rate The rating agencies are under review for their failure to downgrade Enron more promptly. The only trouble is, proposed reforms might make things worse. mark for My Articles similar articles
CFO
September 1, 2008
Alix Stuart
Over Rated? The subprime fiasco has put corporate credit-ratings on thin ice. mark for My Articles similar articles
Registered Rep.
May 17, 2011
Alan Lavine
For Good Insurance, Get a Financially Sound Insurer The near collapse of the financial system in 2008 and 2009 makes it prudent to recommend the financially soundest insurance companies -- even though their premiums may be higher than those of lower-rated competitors. mark for My Articles similar articles
OCC Bulletin
May 22, 2002
Unsafe and Unsound Investment Portfolio Practices Description: Supplemental Guidance This bulletin alerts banks to the potential risk to future earnings and capital from poor investment decisions made at the current low level of interest rates... mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 4, 2010
Anand Chokkavelu
Buffett, the Rating Agencies, and a Possible Opportunity Warren Buffett discusses the rating agencies and suggests a company that may be coming to eat their lunch. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
January 2009
Michael Flynn
Anatomy of a Breakdown Concerted government policy helped trigger the financial meltdown -- and will almost certainly extend it. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
August 15, 2005
Hempel & Henry
Ranting At The Ratings Agencies Sean Egan likes to take shots at Moody's and S&P but is tight-lipped about his firm, Egan-Jones Ratings Co. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
May 12, 2009
Ivan Martchev
Why the FASB Change Hurts Investors The Financial Accounting Standards Board changes allow companies to use significant judgment in estimating asset values ... the kind of judgment those companies lacked in acquiring those same assets. Why should we trust them now? mark for My Articles similar articles
FDIC FYI FYI: An Update on Emerging Issues in Banking Assessing the banking industry's exposure to an implicit government guarantee of gses mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
April 18, 2011
Alex Dumortier
Revealed: 3 Emails That Explain the Crisis Released last week, a new 650-page Senate report on the financial crisis describes multiple aspects of a financial system run amok, including the way in which bankers muscled ratings agencies to turbo-charge their deal-making machine. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
July 29, 2011
Morgan Housel
Still the Most Powerful Companies in the World The unmatched power of the rating agencies Moody's and Standard & Poor's. mark for My Articles similar articles
On Wall Street
May 1, 2010
Alan J. Foxman
Do You Always Have A Right To An Attorney In Arbitration? Q&A: Rights to attorneys in arbitration... Is giving the client a bond's rating enough when it comes to disclosing risks?... mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
October 16, 2008
Zoe Van Schyndel
The Risky Business of Securities Lending Is your mutual fund betting with your money? mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
Commercial Investment Real Estate
Sep/Oct 2005
Andrew Stewart
7 Real Estate Finance Myths Unveiled Discover the market factors that really are influencing today's real estate transactions. mark for My Articles similar articles
OCC Bulletin
December 6, 2000
Risk-Based Capital The Agencies are proposing to modify the risk-based capital treatment on claims against certain securities firms. The proposal would reduce the risk weight on claims on, or guaranteed by, qualifying securities firms to 20 percent from 100 percent... mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Advisor
March 2006
Marla Brill
Mortgage Bonds Offer Mixed Bag A cooling housing market, rising interest rates and regulatory scrutiny have bond fund managers and fixed-income strategists keeping a watchful eye on the direction of the $5.8 trillion mortgage-backed securities market. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
October 12, 2010
Dan Caplinger
How to Make Money Like a Bailed-Out Bank Big institutions are the main winners, but you can still participate. Savvy investors are discovering ways to reap their own profits from the government's policies, even in areas that few investors truly understand. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
July 15, 2008
Alex Dumortier
Bank Losses: Are We Just Getting Started? Bank losses have spooked the market. They could yet quadruple. mark for My Articles similar articles
U.S. Banker
April 2008
Joseph Rosta
If You Build an Exchange, Will They Come? Devising exchange-based trading, complete with futures and options contracts, for the public trading of these securities may be the surest route to creating transparency and setting firm prices. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Real Estate Investor
May 1, 2008
Bernard J. Haddigan
A Structured Finance Hangover At the height of the commercial real estate market's historic up cycle in 1999, collateralized debt obligations emerged on the scene. mark for My Articles similar articles