-
+12 +1
Newsonomics: Alden Global Capital is making so much money wrecking local journalism it might not want to stop anytime soon
Digital First Media's financials — revealed here — show how the company has ridden its deep cuts to nearly $160 million in profits and the highest margins in the business. By Ken Doctor.
-
+6 +1
The Donald’s Fabulous Fiscal Folly And Wall Street’s Wile E. Coyote Moment
There has never been a more fiscally clueless team at the top than the Donald and his dimwitted Treasury secretary, Simple Steve Mnuchin. By David Stockman.
-
+11 +1
Goldman Sachs Lobby Art Explains Everything That’s Wrong With Our Elites
What this $5 million mural says about art and finance stewing in the same nihilistic culture pot. By James McElroy.
-
+7 +1
How Two House Democrats Defended Helping the GOP Weaken Dodd-Frank Financial Regulations
Ten years after the meltdown, Congress moves to loosen rules again. What could go wrong? By Lee Fang.
-
+8 +1
Why Killing Dodd-Frank Could Lead to the Next Crash
Eliminating the bill was a top priority for Trump. So why did any Dems vote for it? By Matt Taibbi.
-
+12 +1
Wall Street Is Sharpening Our Nanoseconds
If people want to trade stocks every hundredth of a nanosecond, why not let them?
-
+16 +1
We Are Still Living in the Ruins of the 2008 Crash
Ten years after Wall Street’s doomsday, how the financial meltdown broke the modern world and left us living in this one.
-
+24 +1
The Trump Administration Finds A New Way To Hand Banks Even More Money
Do “financial services” include banking? Not according to the Trump administration… By David Sirota.
-
+8 +1
Trump Ally Rep. Chris Collins Arrested for Insider Trading. Is the Swamp Drained Now?
White collar criminologist Bill Black analyzes the significance of Rep. Chris Collins arrest for insider trading along with his son and son’s fiance’s father on 13 counts of wire fraud, securities fraud, and making false statements to the FBI. Collins was first Congressman to endorse Trump and is one of his closest confidants.
-
+15 +1
A Low, Dishonest Decade
Ten years after the American economy nearly pitched itself into the abyss, financial elites are again banking on ignorance and incompetence. By Chris Lehmann.
-
+11 +1
Sudden jump in US interest rates prompts Wall Street stock plunge
Wall Street stocks has plunged with major indices losing more than three percent in a sell-off prompted by the sudden jump in US interest rates. At the closing bell in the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average had lost 3.1 percent or 830 points to finish at 25,613.35, in the biggest fall in eight months.
-
+18 +1
Wall Street's Corruption Runs Deeper Than You Can Fathom
Author Carmen Segarra sounds off on Goldman Sachs, deregulation and how our culture rewards bad behavior. By Robert Scheer.
-
+14 +1
The Country [Mongolia] That Exiled McKinsey
A dubious project raises serious questions about the world’s most prestigious consulting firm and its work for corruption-plagued regimes. By Ian MacDougall, Anand Tumurtogoo.
-
0 +1
Find out how EMI Free Loan differs from regular Personal Loan
Personal Loans from other banks may not give you flexiblity of only interest payment. Also, Loan from your bank account may attract prepayment charges.
-
+1 +1
Home Owner Loan
Renovate or redesign your home with House Owner Loan.
-
+13 +1
Wall Street Sees Worst Drop Since 1987
U.S. stock markets fell the most since 1987 in early trading on Monday, having been suspended, limit down, almost immediately after trading started, as the shutdown of increasing swathes of public life in the U.S. brought home the scale of the coronavirus outbreak.
-
+4 +1
Wall Street Quietly Begins Warning About A Biden Presidency
With Joe Biden surging in the polls, Wall Street executives are preparing for a potential scenario where he becomes president—with some firms warning clients the stock market could take a hit.
-
+12 +1
Wall Street shifts bets to big pharma as COVID-19 vaccine race progresses
Wall Street is moving some bets on COVID-19 vaccines to large pharmaceutical companies with robust manufacturing capabilities, signaling that a love affair with small biotech firms might be ending after the sector’s best quarter in almost 20 years.
-
+19 +1
The $5.3 Trillion Question Behind America’s COVID-19 Failure
That’s the amount of buybacks U.S. corporations funneled to shareholders during the past decade—rather than invest in technologies for the common good.
-
+19 +1
Apple Just Sold $14 Billion in Bonds to Buy Back Stock. What It Means for Investors.
Apple just sold $14 billion of bonds, and plans to send part of the proceeds to its shareholders. Investors may wonder why now, given the company’s giant cash reserve and a stock near record highs. But a more appropriate question might be: Why not?
Submit a link
Start a discussion