Search for: "Bear Stearns Asset-Backed" Results 41 - 60 of 155
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24 Dec 2011, 2:00 am by Mandelman
  He opens the back door of the sedan and reaches in for the bags. [read post]
18 Oct 2011, 3:00 am by LindaMBeale
  (Funny, when private sector banks went bad like Countryside, and Washington Mutual and Lehmann Brothers and Bear Stearns or insider traders go rogue or corporations like Enron and WorldCom and Scrushy's health care empire go south, rightwingers say it's just a single bad apple and shouldn't be viewed as representative. [read post]
15 Oct 2011, 4:43 am by Mandelman
Problems Forecasting Unemployment… Look, I remember this issue quite clearly… it’s the one about the administration’s insanely optimistic unemployment forecasts in the stimulus plan… 8% in 2009 and back down to 7% in 2010. [read post]
30 Sep 2011, 2:01 pm by AdamSmith1776
Between the March 2008 collapse of Bear Stearns and the March 2009 market lows, the US dollar was the fourth best-performing currency in the world, trailing on ly the Argentine peso, Chinese renminbi, and Japanese yen. [read post]
11 Aug 2011, 3:53 pm by Eva Arevuo
In one such suit, AIG has sued Bank of America, the largest bank holding company by assets in the United States, over alleged fraud in hundreds upon hundreds of mortgage backed securities. [read post]
29 Jul 2011, 5:23 pm by Mandelman
Until MERS entered the picture, you could find out who owned a given property going back to the beginning of this country’s existence. [read post]
24 Jul 2011, 12:00 pm by Jennifer S. Taub
Resolution authority is a third alternative – instead of the choice between a government-funded bailout (a la Bear Stearns) and a chaotic bankruptcy (such as Lehman). [read post]
26 Jun 2011, 8:41 am by Mary Todd
The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008: Creating The Troubled Asset Relief Program After the collapse of Bear Stearns and subsequent bank failures, Congress quickly enacted the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (“EESA”), more commonly known as the “Bailout Bill. [read post]
22 Jun 2011, 6:25 am
During that period, 4,580 assignments of mortgage took place between banks and these six groups of trusts: Bear Stearns, GSAMP, GSAA, Morgan Stanley, Structured Asset Investment Loans (SAIL) and Structured Asset Mortgage Investments (SAMI). [read post]
25 May 2011, 4:46 pm by Mandelman
Securitization is the process of packaging loans into securities that are then be sold to investors, called Asset Backed Securities (or ABS). [read post]
23 May 2011, 5:29 am by Mandelman
  And that meant that certain investors on The Street could now bet against the mortgage-backed bonds that were starting to sell like hotcakes. [read post]
8 Apr 2011, 11:46 am by Buce
  Jimmy Cayne the bridge player at Bear Stearns--hard to tell exactly what was going on in his mind but he seems to have figured that somebody else would solve is banking problem while he was trying to figure out whether to raise three no trump. [read post]
9 Mar 2011, 7:30 pm by Adam Levitin
 The AGs remember tangling with Ocwen, Fairbanks (now Select Portfolio Servicing) and EMC (later Bear Stearns and now JPMorgan Chase) back in 2003 for predatory servicing. [read post]
14 Jan 2011, 7:27 pm by Adam Levitin
Let's start by taking a look at another ABFC PSA (not the ABFC 2005-OPT1 series involved in Ibanez), this time from ABFC Asset Backed Securities Series 2005-WMC1 (a Weyerhauser Mortgage Corporation deal--Weyerhauser was GE's subprime origination arm). [read post]
10 Jan 2011, 12:14 am by Kevin LaCroix
Major financial institutions like Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, and Lehman Brothers imploded as a consequence of the financial dislocation. [read post]
21 Dec 2010, 6:51 am by admin
  States have assets, remember, and these can be sold. [read post]
19 Dec 2010, 1:16 am by Mandelman
I rarely do this sort of thing… But, ProPublica posted an article about real life foreclosures not fitting the conventional wisdom of what most people think they are… they’re not a bunch of low income minorities who should never have been able to buy their homes in the first place, for example. [read post]
17 Dec 2010, 8:46 am by Mandelman
Before the following year would come to its end, Bear Stearns would be handed off to Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, essentially in the middle of the night… initially for just $2 a share, although the price was soon raised to $10 a share in deference to Bear’s shareholders. [read post]
22 Nov 2010, 5:20 pm by Michael Rinne
As in real life, like Barry Fox, a research supervisor who worked for nine years at Bear Stearns, and committed suicide from a drug overdose and then jumping from his 29th-floor apartment after he learned he wouldn't be hired by JP Morgan Chase, the movie portrays how some people die over money. [read post]