Articles About Economics

Author:
James I. Clark III
Posted:
03.31.2009

Happy 212th Birthday, Nykredit Realkredit!

The CMBS market is anything but rotten in the state of Denmark. While the American mortgage securitization system crumbles, the Danes are successfully securitizing commercial and residential loans exactly as they have since 1797.  That’s when Nykredit Realkredit – Denmark’s largest mortgage bank – was established.  And, there hasn’t been a single Danish mortgage bond […]

Read More ›
Author:
Michael Alter
Posted:
03.12.2009

Nothing Succeeds Like Success

Tuesday, March 10’s 379.44 stock market spike – the best finish since Thanksgiving – came on the heels of Citigroup, Inc.’s news that it had made a healthy profit during the first two months of 2009.  At the end of the day, the stock market had soared to a 6,926.49 close. So, what did it?  […]

Read More ›
Author:
James I. Clark III
Posted:
03.05.2009

Deep Freeze of an Unregulated Economy

Iceland’s economic collapse, the result of a reckless government and a lack of financial regulation, is an object lesson to Americans who fear increased — but necessary – markets oversight. Icelandic debt is 10 times the country’s GDP!  In the United States, our debt would have to be close to $100 trillion to put us […]

Read More ›
Author:
Kurt Rosene
Posted:
03.02.2009

Obama’s Housing Plan Seeks to Help Homeowners in Trouble

Nine million homeowners can breathe a preliminary sigh of relief.  They may get to keep their homes now that President Obama has unveiled his ambitious – and larger than expected — $75 billion mortgage relief plan.  At the same time, the Treasury Department will double the size of its support of Fannie Mae and Freddie […]

Read More ›
Author:
Sam Gould
Posted:
02.27.2009

When Your Business Is Hurting, Give It Away for Free

Denny’s, the one-time king of value restaurants, recently tried to regain some of its lost glory by offering a free Grand Slam breakfast to everyone who showed up during limited morning/early afternoon hours.  The $5.99 Grand Slam breakfast includes two eggs, two bacon strips, two sausages and two pancakes. More than 2,000,000 people took advantage […]

Read More ›
Author:
Mike Ochs
Posted:
02.23.2009

A Brief History of the Fed

The origins of the public/private Federal Reserve Bank is the subject of a new book “Innumeracy”, by John Allen Paulos. Established in 1913 when Congress passed the Federal Reserve Act in an attempt to prevent financial panics, the Fed still had an aura of mystery. Even more curiously, the Fed’s founders knowingly created the perception […]

Read More ›
Author:
Mike Ochs
Posted:
02.18.2009

Homeowners Rush to Refinance While Interest Rates Are Low

What recession? A recent conversation with a friend revealed the unexpected nugget that at least one segment of the credit industry is alive and extremely well. The friend’s mortgage broker daughter is taking a leave of absence from law school to concentrate her energies on processing all the refinance applications coming her way – a […]

Read More ›
Author:
Tom Silva
Posted:
02.17.2009

Chicago Economists Say 2009 Is a Year of Challenge

The economic forecast for 2009 is bleak, although it’s possible that recovery will begin mid-year. This is the opinion of William Strauss and Rick Mattoon, senior economists with the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. “We are predicting that 2008 will yield real GDP of 0.2 percent and that 2009 will be 0.7 percent,” Strauss said. […]

Read More ›
Author:
Tom Silva
Posted:
01.06.2009

Santa Claus Doesn’t Deliver Consumer Confidence

Consumer confidence fell to an all-time low in December, despite the fact it was in the midst of the annual Christmas-shopping frenzy.  The reasons for this new low include deepening job insecurity, fast-deteriorating housing markets, and declining asset values. According to the Conference Board, the Consumer Confidence Index fell to 38 in December, compared with the […]

Read More ›
Author:
Tom Silva
Posted:
12.30.2008

How Low Can the Fed Go?

The Federal Reserve is pulling out most – if not all — of the stops to thaw credit.  The central bank has cut its federal funds rate for overnight borrowing to just 0.25 percent, the lowest level ever.  But the move is likely too little, too late because the problem is not the lack of […]

Read More ›

Categories

Archives