Market Tanks After Too Much Excitement
Like a kid that ingested too much sugar, the market finally came down today.
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Like a kid that ingested too much sugar, the market finally came down today.
If Eliot Spitzer can engineer his own comeback, one media analyst wonders, why not a fellow financial expert?
Enjoy the Schadenfreude, populist hordes.
With the game getting serious, the CEOs of America's largest financial institutions are turning on one another.
It's a humble plan, but he believes it will work.
In light of a front-page story painting him as an epic liar, Ponzi schemer, and maybe-murderer, the private-equity head steps down.
There's a reason JPMorgan can afford to pay back the TARP funds "tomorrow" if they feel like it.
Stylish car, stylish sunglasses ... what does this tell us about Bernie's brother?
The second-largest bank beat expectations, is happy about it.
No one criticized him when things were going well, the mayor says, so no one should criticize him now.
This longtime Merrill Lynch executive knows from bailouts.
"Before we douse her with more champagne, put her on TV with Charlie Rose and hand over the keys to the Treasury Department, it might be worth taking another look at what really happened."
There's a lot of fake money floating around again.
Former Treasury secretary Hank Paulson packed the department with clones of himself. Here's our guide to who's who.
"They make you take your shoes off and everything — it's terrible," the suspected Ponzi schemer complains.