From The Economist print edition. How today’s financial crisis resembles the one that happened three-quarters of a century ago, and how it does not.
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News articles, podcasts & videos on the current financial crisis that I find interesting or helpful.
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Fed Moves Rally Futures
Stock futures jumped after the Fed said it would buy companies' short-term debt and investors looked for coordinated interest-rate cuts from central banks. Markets in Europe and Asia rebounded.
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EU Fights Irrelevance in Crunch
The EU tried to coordinate its response to the banking crisis, but markets slid amid questions about its members' ability to act as a bloc.
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Fed Looks to Ease Strains in Commercial-Paper Market
U.S. officials are examining ways to ease deepening strains in the commercial paper market, which have been hit by an unwillingness among money market investors to hold risky assets.
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Monday, October 6, 2008
Corporate America caught in global credit undertow
U.S. companies are finding it harder and costlier to raise funds for daily operations in the latest sign that the global credit crunch is fast spreading beyond the banking sector.
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Financial Crises Spread in Europe
The growing crisis has underlined the difficulty of taking concerted action in Europe because its economies are far more integrated than its governing structures.
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Full of Doubts, U.S. Shoppers Cut Spending
Consumers are pulling back on their spending, all but guaranteeing that the economic situation will get worse.
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Friday, October 3, 2008
Uncertainty Over Rescue Intensifies Credit Crisis - WSJ.com
New signs are emerging that suggest the credit crisis is deepening as lenders grow more distrustful of their own customers and each other.
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WSJ.com - Opinion: How Government Stoked the Mania
Housing prices would never have risen so high without multiple Washington mistakes. (Ok so this has some Op-Ed influence, but still raises thoughtful points and has supporting data.)
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Tuesday, September 30, 2008
How Did We Get into This Mess?
How Did We Get into This Mess? The Origins of the Housing Crisis. Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the Fed, said in a recent Wall Street Journal interview that an end to the decline in house prices is “a necessary condition for an end to the current global financial crisis.” The question remains: How did we get into this mess?
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Lehman's Demise Triggered Cash Crunch Around Globe
The decision to let Lehman collapse sparked a chain reaction with global reach. This discusses the events leading up to, during and after Lehman's bankruptcy filing.
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The economy's 3 vicious cycles
The financial crisis consists of three related cycles spinning downward: Confidence, deleveraging and housing. Be careful trying to stop them.
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Financial rescue 101: What's in the bill
What got killed: The fate of the most sweeping government rescue since the Great Depression is in doubt after the House voted against it Monday. Here's what was in the package.
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A Look At The European Banking Situation
The bank bailout has extended to Europe, where infusions of government cash rescued some struggling financial giants. Analysts predict the result of the crisis will be a major consolidation of European banks.
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BBC: Excellent graphic representation US sub-prime crisis
The US sub-prime mortgage crisis has led to plunging property prices, a slowdown in the US economy, and billions in losses by banks. It stems from a fundamental change in the way mortgages are funded.
This article was written in November 2007 and provides an eerily accurate forecast for what has unfolded so far in 2008, a must read.
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This article was written in November 2007 and provides an eerily accurate forecast for what has unfolded so far in 2008, a must read.
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Could Wall Street Woes Set Off A Global Crisis? : NPR
The bankruptcy of financial services giant Lehman Brothers and the 500-point drop in the stock market on Sept. 15 have sent shock waves through the financial community. Law professor Michael Greenberger discusses the potential global ramifications of the recent turmoil.
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The Week America's Economy Almost Died
When short-term credit markets seized up last week, many economists and regulators say America faced a terrifying abyss. The nation risked becoming a place where no banks would lend and no customers could buy, where no one could get paid and commerce would cease — perhaps for decades.
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2008
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October
(10)
- Echoes of the Depression: 1929 and all that
- Fed Moves Rally Futures
- Opinion: Loose Money And the Roots Of the Crisis
- EU Fights Irrelevance in Crunch
- Fed Looks to Ease Strains in Commercial-Paper Market
- Corporate America caught in global credit undertow
- Financial Crises Spread in Europe
- Full of Doubts, U.S. Shoppers Cut Spending
- Uncertainty Over Rescue Intensifies Credit Crisis ...
- WSJ.com - Opinion: How Government Stoked the Mania
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September
(9)
- How Did We Get into This Mess?
- Lehman's Demise Triggered Cash Crunch Around Globe
- The economy's 3 vicious cycles
- Financial rescue 101: What's in the bill
- A Look At The European Banking Situation
- BBC: Excellent graphic representation US sub-prime...
- Could Wall Street Woes Set Off A Global Crisis? : NPR
- The Week America's Economy Almost Died
- WSJ.com - Opinion: Let's Get the Bank Rescue Right
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October
(10)