Search for: "Bear Stearns Asset-Backed" Results 121 - 140 of 155
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4 Aug 2008, 12:10 pm
Adding to Cadwalader's woes are that Bear Stearns (RIP) and Lehman Brothers, now under siege, were key clients. [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]
25 Jan 2010, 12:25 pm by Nick Li
Back in 2006 it seems like the industrialized world had achieved a consensus on monetary policy. [read post]
19 Aug 2009, 3:44 pm by attyrtamaradesilva
  We do not like to make decisions or look back in hindsight and think we made decisions by tossing a coin. [read post]
9 Jan 2012, 12:58 am by Kevin LaCroix
Thus, for example, the dismissal motions were denied in the Lehman Brothers case (about which refer here), in the Bear Stearns case (here), in the BofA/Merrill Lynch merger case (here), as well as in the Citigroup case (here), the AIG case (here) and the Washington Mutual case (here). [read post]
2 Apr 2012, 6:15 am by Mandelman
  No reason to think they knew each other back then, five years is a big difference at that age. [read post]
10 Oct 2010, 8:11 am by Mandelman
Apparently, JPMorgan Chase also has quite a bit of robo-signing going on back at its headquarters as well. [read post]
22 Jan 2012, 3:53 pm by Mandelman
  “We’ve never done this before; we don’t know what the risk is,” Westhoff, a top-ranked mortgage-bond analyst in polls by Institutional Investor magazine for 15 years in a row while at Bear Stearns Cos., said today at a briefing for reporters in New York. [read post]
21 Dec 2010, 6:51 am by admin
  States have assets, remember, and these can be sold. [read post]
16 Jan 2012, 12:05 am by Kevin LaCroix
In this and some of the other high profile credit crisis cases – Citigroup; the BofA/Merrill Lynch merger case; Bear Stearns; AIG – it will be very interesting to see how the likely settlements of these cases will unfold. [read post]
29 Sep 2020, 7:55 am by Lucas Harty
While I started out at Cravath and had spent summers at Skadden Arps, I ended up moving to M&A at Bear Stearns, not as an attorney, but as a banker. [read post]
4 Feb 2009, 7:44 am
But since, in addition, those countries are committed to fixed or significantly managed exchange rates, these rising claims take the form of central bank reserves, typically invested not in a wide array of equity, property or fixed income assets - but almost exclusively in apparently risk-free or close to risk-free government bonds or government guaranteed bonds. [read post]
19 Aug 2009, 5:27 pm
In the case of Bear Stearns, many of the trading in mortgage related securities involved financial instruments assigned only a notional value. [read post]
8 Jun 2010, 4:58 pm by Mandelman
  The Big Players are General Motors, Chrysler, Lehman Brothers,   Bear Stearns, Washington Mutual and Countrywide. [read post]
14 May 2012, 8:57 am
We do not like to make decisions or look back in hindsight and think we made decisions by tossing a coin. [read post]
26 Sep 2008, 11:54 am
  The failure of such large entities as Washington Mutual, Bear Stearns, and IndyMac has left many people bewildered and afraid.[1]  Naturally unsettled by deepening concerns over the financial markets, many people are worried about both their financial assets and the future of the economy. [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]
25 Mar 2010, 2:40 am
Sixth, the bill would extend orderly wind-down authority currently held by the FDIC with respect to commercial banks, to cover other large financial firms as well -- huge, systemically integrated nonbank securities firms such as Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers until recently were -- most of which now pose systemic risks to the broader economy quite as fully as commercial banks do. [read post]
14 Apr 2010, 3:55 am by Mandelman
” “Washington Mutual built a conveyor belt that dumped toxic mortgage assets into the financial system like a polluter dumping poison into a river. [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]