Search for: "Bear Stearns Asset-Backed" Results 81 - 100 of 155
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18 Feb 2010, 6:49 am by admin
  One by one Wall Street’s financial pillars – Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, AIG, and Fannie Mae – suffered bear raids. [read post]
27 Jul 2010, 6:05 pm by Mandelman
And then there’s Maiden Lane I, Maiden Lane II, and Maiden Lane III… three Limited Liability Companies that the Fed formed to buy up the assets (read: mortgage backed securities and credit default swaps) of Bear Stearns, WaMu, and AIG that JPMorgan Chase and no one else for that matter wanted. [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]
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]
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 Sep 2008, 2:20 am
Just as was the case following the Bear Stearns takeover, the overall market reacted very positively to the news of the government rescue of Fannie and Freddie. [read post]
12 May 2009, 6:23 am
For example, Bank of America acquired Merrill Lynch, JPMorgan acquired Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual, and Wells Fargo acquired Wachovia. [read post]
25 Jun 2023, 9:05 am by Kevin LaCroix
Readers will recall that while Bear Stearns collapsed in March 2008, it was more than six months later, in late September 2008, that Lehman Brothers collapsed. [read post]
17 Sep 2008, 5:56 am
" According to the Real Time Economics blog (here), the only other time this specific Fed power has been exercised since the Depression era was in connection with the Bear Stearns bailout. [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]
14 Mar 2010, 11:01 pm
Both Geithner and Paulson were intimately involved in attempting to broker a Bear Stearns-type bailout of Lehman. [read post]
5 Feb 2010, 6:05 am by Hal Scott, Harvard Law School,
None of the most prominent failures of the financial crisis—Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, AIG, Bear Stearns, or Lehman Brothers—were deposit-taking banks. [read post]
3 Jul 2012, 7:26 am by admin
The Fed, worried about rewarding other companies for excessive risk taking after coming to the aid of tottering investment bank Bear Stearns in March 2008, said no. [read post]
14 Apr 2010, 3:00 am by LindaMBeale
  It likely would not prevent a financial crisis  (because the government's actual decision to winddown a firm would likely come after the crisis has already become, as in the Bear Stearns and Lehman cases, since the next crisis will most likely come from developments that catch regulators unawares or where regulatory capture by powerful banks has prevented the kind of indepth oversight that is necessary to apply this remedy as a preventive). [read post]
19 Aug 2009, 8:16 pm
They are things like the market crashes of 1987 and 2000, Long-Term Capital Management, the collapse of Bear Stearns, the Savings and Loan Crisis, the crash of 1929, the collapse of Northern Rock, the Russian Debt crisis, the 1997 Asian financial crisis, the 1990 Japanese asset bubble crisis, the 1973 oil crisis and 1978 energy crisis, the Credit Crisis, etc. [read post]
25 Jun 2010, 9:22 am by James Hamilton
Investors were afraid to trade as Bear Stearns, AIG, and Lehman Brothers failed because any new transaction could expose them to more riskIn an effort to address the systemic risk to the financial markets posed by derivatives, the Senate legislation would mandate, for the first time, the federal regulation of derivatives under a dual SEC-CFTC regime that emphasize transparency. [read post]
1 Feb 2012, 9:07 am by McNabb Associates, P.C.
Switzerland’s second-largest bank said in February 2008 it would take writedowns on asset-backed securities after finding “mismarkings” by a group of traders. [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]