MagPortal.com   Clustify - document clustering
 Home  |  Newsletter  |  My Articles  |  My Account  |  Help 
Similar Articles
The Motley Fool
May 3, 2011
Cindy Johnson
SEC Fears Banks Are Putting Lipstick on Piggish Loans Are overvalued real estate loans inflating the book value of your bank? mark for My Articles similar articles
Bank Director
1st Quarter 2011
Jack Milligan
In the Eye of the Storm Former Comptroller of the Currency John C. Dugan speaks candidly about the financial crisis of 2008, the landmark Dodd-Frank Act and the need for minimum loan underwriting standards for the banking industry. 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
U.S. Banker
September 2008
John Engen
Future Shock Where to start when trying to figure out how the banking industry got into the mess it's in today? And where, exactly, do we go from here? mark for My Articles similar articles
U.S. Banker
May 2007
Thomas P. Vartanian
Crisis and Opportunity In Subprime Mortgage Markets Problems in the subprime mortgage business will inevitably lead to opportunities for those who can evaluate, service or manage the underlying loans, securities and real estate. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
January 27, 2009
Liz Peek
A Bold New Plan: Dump FAS 157 What can President Obama's financial team do to right the banking ship? One idea that should be reviewed is the elimination of mark-to-market accounting, required by FAS 157, which would go a long way toward stabilizing the banks. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bank Director
2nd Quarter 2009
Jack Milligan
Scrambling for Solutions Get ready for the mother of all lobbying battles in Washington later this year when the Obama administration starts pushing its reform agenda for financial regulation in the U.S. Congress. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
April 7, 2011
Karen Weise
Banks 'Too Big to Fail' Could Get Bigger Federal agencies putting mortgage and derivative reforms into force are writing rules that seem to have a big-bank bias. 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
The Motley Fool
March 23, 2010
Morgan Housel
Alan Greenspan on the Financial Collapse Love him or hate him, Greenspan opens up on the past two years. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bank Director
3rd Quarter 2009
John Berlau
Overregulation Plan Won't Fix Financial Crisis Initial reports indicate that these early hopes of a more accountable regulatory structure from the Obama administration have been dashed. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
March 11, 2010
Roger Lowenstein
Commentary: First, Slap Limits on Bank Leverage The fight over a financial consumer protection agency misses the point. What fueled the crisis was bank debt. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
October 2, 2008
Alex Dumortier
Mark-to-Market Accounting: What You Should Know How does it work, and why is Congress pushing to suspend it? mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
May 19, 2009
Morgan Housel
How to Destroy the Credit Card Industry Congress is slogging through new regulation that will, among other things, hinder the "abusive and unfair" practice of banks jacking up interest rates on existing credit card balances. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
December 7, 2009
Anand Chokkavelu
Roundtable: The Biggest Threat to Banking Is the biggest threat to banking commercial real estate? Credit card losses? Falling housing prices? Derivatives? Government regulation? Something else? mark for My Articles similar articles
National Real Estate Investor
May 1, 2008
Ben Johnson
Regulators Turn Up Heat On Local Banks Community and mid-size banks, which comprise the bulk of all commercial real estate lending in this country, are once again under the watchful eye of regulators. mark for My Articles similar articles
Finance & Development
September 2009
Randall Dodd
Overhauling the System The United States is proposing the most radical reform of financial regulation since the New Deal. mark for My Articles similar articles
U.S. Banker
March 2008
John Engen
The Politics of Lending Sen. John McCain took time to present his vision of a world with simplified mortgage applications, and even suggested that the government might need to jump in to help mitigate the worsening crisis. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
August 11, 2008
David Lee Smith
Housing's Worst May Lie Ahead The unraveling of prime mortgages could delay housing's recovery. mark for My Articles similar articles
HBS Working Knowledge
April 23, 2008
Dwight Crane
The Gap in the U.S. Treasury Recommendations U.S. Treasury recommendations for strengthening the regulation of the financial system are a good start but fall short, says Harvard Business School professor emeritus Dwight B. Crane. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
April 14, 2010
Campbell & Henry
The Home-Equity Hurt Ahead for Banks Bad second mortgages are about to batter earnings and slow efforts to resolve the foreclosure crisis mark for My Articles similar articles
On Wall Street
December 1, 2008
Cheyenne Hopkins
The Obama Agenda: Reforming Regulation The fight for the presidency is over, but the battle over the future of financial services has just begun. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
January 2009
Katherine Mangu-Ward
Is Deregulation to Blame? The new Washington consensus says "yes." The facts on the ground say something different. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
October 27, 2009
The Treasury Answers Fools' Questions Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Neal Wolin answers Motley Fool readers' questions regarding regulatory reform. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Advisor
August 2009
Seth Becker
What Can We Do? The financial crisis shows that we must manage our own affairs -- responsibly and with restraint -- or someone will do it for us. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
September 17, 2007
Dawn Kopecki
The SEC Wants More Answers The Securities & Exchange Commission is expanding its probe into the mortgage mess. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 10, 2009
Elliott Orsillo
Bank Shareholders Unite! Recent congressional action may have stimulated the market, but at what cost to bank stocks? mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
Aug/Sep 2009
Jeffrey A. Miron
The Case for Doing Nothing The only plausible argument for bailing out banks crumbles on close examination. The empirical problem with the claim that bank failures destroy intermediation capital is that there isn't strong evidence to support it. mark for My Articles similar articles
HBS Working Knowledge
September 29, 2008
Martha Lagace
Financial Crisis Caution Urged by Faculty Panel Dean Jay O. Light and a group of Harvard Business School faculty explored the origins and possible outcomes of the U.S. financial crisis at a recent "Turmoil on the Street" panel. mark for My Articles similar articles
U.S. Banker
May 2007
Lee Conrad
Subprime Mortgages: As the Knot Unravels, A Question Lingers: Why? Consumers and companies following their self-interest are supposed to be guiding forces that drive a capitalist economy. The recent meltdown of the subprime-mortgage market, however, raises the question of whether all participants were headed in that direction. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
December 10, 2007
David Lee Smith
Let's Raise the Hood on Mortgage Lending Since we're into investigating all manner of activities, let's take a hard look at lending. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
July 13, 2007
Dan Caplinger
A Tale of Two Borrowers Unfortunately, many homeowners never consider that they may not really be able to afford the home they own. As painful as it is to give up your home, it's not worth risking financial ruin to stay in a home you can't pay for. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
October 21, 2009
Dayana Yochim
Report From the White House: Will Regulation Stifle Innovation? Here is the fifth installment of our interview with Austan Goolsbee, chief economist for the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Advisor
February 2008
Milton Ezrati
Bailout Plan Spells Trouble For Future Mortgages Although the Bush administration's plan to deal with the subprime problem might help relieve some of today's financial strains, it will do so only at the expense of longer-term costs. mark for My Articles similar articles
U.S. Banker
April 2009
Joseph Rosta
Trade Credit Default Swaps on an Exchange It's time for this vulnerable market to take its vaccine. mark for My Articles similar articles
CFO
February 1, 2008
Tim Reason
Bending the Rules Efforts to contain damage from the subprime-mortgage meltdown are stretching accounting rules for securitization. mark for My Articles similar articles
U.S. Banker
March 2009
Joseph Rosta
FASB Hesitates, SEC Stands Still on Fair Value The banking industry wins a minor skirmish in the fair value war when the Financial Accounting Standards Board turned down a proposed amendment that would have expanded controversial fair value/mark-to-market practices in the financial sector. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
October 15, 2009
David Henry
Banks: Pain Now, Profits Tomorrow By recognizing loan losses preemptively, companies are setting the stage for better earnings next year. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
March 26, 2007
David Lee Smith
Here Come the Mortgage Regulators With subprime lending continuing to plummet, House and Senate hearings run the risk of further retarding a recovery in housing. mark for My Articles similar articles
CFO
August 1, 2012
Randy Myers
Unfinished Business Two years after the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act, the law's implementation is far behind schedule, and its success is still in doubt. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
March 10, 2009
Morgan Housel
Will This Thursday Change Banks' Fortunes? The death of "mark to market" could be a boon for the financial markets. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
April 28, 2011
Hernando de Soto
The Destruction of Economic Facts A renowned Peruvian economist argues that the financial crisis wasn't just about finance - it was about a staggering lack of knowledge. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bank Director
1st Quarter 2011
Jack Millligan
Is the Community Bank Business Model Broken? The concept of community banking is still viable, but the model that many small institutions employ has to change. mark for My Articles similar articles
FDIC FYI
February 7, 2002
Subprime Mortgage Lending Faces the Test of a Slowing Economy Entry by FDIC-insured institutions into subprime lending as a targeted line of business was largely a phenomenon of the 1990s. These lending programs are now being tested by recession, in most cases for the first time... mark for My Articles similar articles
Bank Systems & Technology
June 18, 2009
Maria Bruno-Britz
The Financial Industry Reacts to Obama Regulatory Proposal Although most agree with the general principles outlined in the President's financial reform plan, they find several sticking points -- and IT won't be immune. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
September 19, 2008
Chuck Saletta
Will the Government Destroy American Capitalism? The law of unintended consequences is still stronger than any bailout package or regulation, and the more strongly the government intervenes, the bigger the problems it may cause. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
January 2009
Lacoude & de Rugy
Better Than a Bailout Four steps policy makers could take to help financial markets mark for My Articles similar articles
U.S. Banker
July 2009
Andrew Dubinsky
Electronic Lending Could Help Avert Another Crisis If regulators had the tools in place to effectively view complex debt instruments and the links between the financial institutions that securitize, hold, and insure them this crisis may not have happened. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
April 4, 2008
Tom Hutchinson
Congress Grills Bernanke Over Bear Recent hearings debated the Fed's role in bailing out Bear Stearns. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
February 15, 2008
Dan Caplinger
Can You Really Just Walk Away? Giving up on your mortgage and letting the bank foreclose on your property might seem easy, but how smart is it? mark for My Articles similar articles