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Keyword: marketmeltdown

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  • Why Are Exchange-Traded Funds Preparing For A ‘Liquidity Crisis’ And A ‘Market Meltdown’?

    05/16/2015 5:46:41 PM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 37 replies
    TEC ^ | 05/14/2015 | Michael Snyder
    Some really weird things are happening in the financial world right now. If you go back to 2008, there was lots of turmoil bubbling just underneath the surface during the months leading up to the great stock market crash in the second half of that year. When Lehman Brothers finally did collapse, it was a total shock to most of the planet, but we later learned that their problems had been growing for a long time. I believe that we are in a similar period right now, and the second half of this year promises to be quite chaotic. Apparently,...
  • Banks Given More Leeway In How They Value Toxic Assets

    04/02/2009 9:40:30 AM PDT · by TeleStraightShooter · 35 replies · 1,078+ views
    CNBC ^ | 2009.4.2 | ap
    The board that sets U.S. accounting standards on Thursday gave companies more leeway when valuing assets, providing a potential boost to battered banks' balance sheets. The independent Financial Accounting Standards Board voted to adopt new guidelines under the so-called mark-to-market accounting rules, which require companies to value assets at prices reflecting current market conditions. The board was meeting at its headquarters in Norwalk, Conn. The changes will allow the assets to be valued at what they would go for in an "orderly" sale, as opposed to a forced or distressed sale. The new guidelines will apply to the second quarter...
  • Would a Bush Bailout Save the GOP? (FreeRepublic cited)

    08/25/2007 12:09:28 AM PDT · by 2ndDivisionVet · 62 replies · 1,497+ views
    US News & World Report ^ | August 24, 2007 | James Pethokoukis
    <p>The last politician who took advice from the bond market was Bill Clinton. When he pushed for a tax hike back in 1993 to cut the budget deficit, it was under the assumption that bond investors would respond by bringing down interest rates. (The theory here is that deficits are inflationary. Inflation is bad for bonds.) Yet long-term interest rates surged from 6.45 percent when Clinton signed his tax-hike bill on Aug. 10, 1993, to 8.16 percent on Nov. 7, 1994, the day before the midterm congressional election where Republicans won back the House and Senate.</p>