Search for: "STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY" Results 501 - 520 of 708
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17 Mar 2011, 2:56 pm by Kevin LaCroix
One possibility that occurs to me is that the bank may have carried a significant layer of Side A DIC protection, which may well have been triggered by the bank holding company’s bankruptcy. [read post]
9 Mar 2011, 1:45 pm by Rich
Wall Street banks operated, according to their own dictates, outside of the norms of free market system. [read post]
24 Feb 2011, 8:37 pm by Mandelman
And, in a related story… Arizona’s foreclosure defense plaintiff’s attorneys have been spotted across the state dancing in the streets with some of the state’s distressed homeowners. [read post]
5 Feb 2011, 1:51 pm by Frank Pasquale
But I am also afraid that Matwyshyn is set to join the cavalcade of Cassandras who decried Wall Street’s recklessness last decade: the state regulators, compliance teams, 11,000 appraisers, independent economists, and journalists described on pages 8-18 of the FCIC report as repeatedly, vehemently warning about an impending crisis well before it happened. [read post]
31 Jan 2011, 4:17 am by Mandelman
  In fact, some companies opened up and offered to get homeowners into a trial mod in a matter of hours. [read post]
19 Jan 2011, 6:46 am by Craig R. Hersch
 As I indicated earlier, the trustee is the person (or entity – such as a bank or trust company) responsible for carrying out the terms of the trust. [read post]
13 Jan 2011, 11:45 pm by Chris Carey
Although most of the Chinese companies that Kelley and his associates brought to the United States saw brief spikes in their share prices, nearly all have become long-term losers. [read post]
10 Jan 2011, 12:14 am by Kevin LaCroix
Where plaintiffs have been able to show, using internal documents or confidential witness testimony, that there was a mismatch between what a company was telling investors and what its people were saying internally, the cases have been allowed to proceed. [read post]
7 Jan 2011, 10:04 am by Rich Vetstein
Justice Cordy, a former big firm corporate lawyer, chastised lenders and their Wall Street lawyers for “the utter carelessness with which the plaintiff banks documented the titles to their assets. [read post]
5 Jan 2011, 7:09 am
At issue are the electronic processes, trusts and paperwork, companies relied upon to package and sell mortgages as investments. [read post]
3 Jan 2011, 2:00 am by Keith Paul Bishop
Every quarter, the California Department of Financial Institutions distributes a quarterly report presenting summary statistics for banks, industrial banks, credit unions, offices of foreign banks and trust companies with a one-year comparison. [read post]
28 Dec 2010, 10:41 am by Keith Griffin
On its watch list: Behringer Harvard REIT I, Inland America Real Estate Trust, Inland Western Retail Real Estate Trust, Wells Real Estate Investment Trust II and Piedmont Office Realty Trust. [read post]
17 Dec 2010, 8:46 am by Mandelman
Two things occurred to me right away: It’s wasn’t borrowers not making mortgage payments that was taking down the titans of Wall Street. [read post]
7 Dec 2010, 1:18 pm
Christiana Bank & Trust Company (3D09-2653) As with the Opella case above, the Third District reversed a judgment based upon the failure to serve the defendant with the complaint. [read post]
6 Dec 2010, 12:44 pm by Mandelman
  The transformation of complex business requirements to complex Wall Street Engineering was an easy one. [read post]
6 Dec 2010, 10:55 am by Mandelman
  The entire foreclosure crisis has been and continues to be perhaps the least understood disaster in the history of the world, and with the federal and state governments doing their best Marx-Brothers-Meets-Carrot-Top imitation in their handling of the situation, throughout 2009 figuring out who could be trusted and who couldn’t just got murkier and murkier. [read post]
2 Dec 2010, 8:45 am by admin
  The trust depositors place in their institutions, and the economic cataclysm that follows when banks are untrustworthy custodians, led all the world’s developed nations to create deposit insurance backed by the government (in the US, the FDIC). [read post]