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U.S. Banker March 2002 Man Yin Li |
Transfer That Risk! With more and more bankruptcies and defaults, many banks can protect themselves with credit derivatives. There are dangers in using them, but if used intelligently, they can be a boon to many banks... |
Salon.com February 5, 2002 Damien Cave |
Risky business How did Enron break into the elite Wall Street world of credit derivatives? |
Reason January 2002 Rachel Alembakis |
Free Money French Prime Minister Lionel Jospin, a likely presidential candidate in his country's 2002 elections, has thrown his support behind a plan to tax all currency speculation transfers originating in Europe... |
U.S. Banker August 2001 John Hackett |
Credit Derivatives Hit a Snag After years of booming growth, the market in these hedging tools dropped in the first quarter, but the consensus is that they're too good to keep down. Includes statistics on the biggest bank participants. |
IDB America July 2001 Ann Moline |
How to navigate in financial storms New book offers a practical approach to financial risk management in emerging markets... |
CIO April 1, 2001 Lee Pender |
Trading Up After 75 years, a fixture of Chicago's markets wants to do more than settle corn bushels futures. Its leaders want to be the premier B2B marketplace backbone... |
AskMen.com November 12, 2000 Luis Rodrigues |
Trading Tips For Moneymakers Rules for overcoming greed to take profits when doing speculative trading. |
Salon.com August 9, 2000 Barrie Walsh |
Fool's gold The Gold Anti-Trust Action (GATA), a lobbying group in Dallas, believes the gold market is being manipulated. I do, too. How I bought into a sucker's scheme. |
Wired April 2000 Joey Anuff & Gary Wolf |
The Dumbass, The Daytrader, and the New Democracy Anthony Elgindy, the Mad Max of Wall Street, has seen the revolution: thousands upon thousands flooding into the electronically liberated stock market. "The public is there for one reason and one reason only," Anthony says. "They are there to absorb the risk." And guess who will drive you to maximum absorption? |
Fast Company April 2000 Joseph Hooper |
Hardball Softball When the closing bell sounds at the New York Stock Exchange, hard-charging brokers and clerks trade their wing tips for spikes and head for the playing fields of Jersey City. Welcome to Wall Street softball, where only the ball is soft. |
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