Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. What cute-sounding names. They suggest adorable siblings, not twin financial disasters that may cost $1 trillion when we get the final bill.
According to Edward Pinto, Fannie Mae’s former chief credit officer, in 2008 the two government-supported mortgage finance companies, along with the Federal Housing Administration [...]
Posts Tagged ‘oil’
Kotlikoff: How to Fix the Mortgage Mess
January 17th, 2011 by Financial Writer
Tags: au, bank, banks, borrow, borrowers, borrowing, business, buyers, Debt, economic, economics, fannie Mae, fed, finance, financial, freddie Mac, glo, Global Financial, government, home prices, housing, interest rate, Invest, investment, investor, investors, lender, lenders, loan, loans, money, mortgage, mortgage applications, mortgage finance, mortgage market, mortgages, oil, president, rate, stock, subprime mortgages, taxpayers, ubs, us, wall street
Canadian bonds beat world
January 8th, 2011 by Financial Writer
Returns in Canada’s bond market exceeded the rest of the world in 2010, gaining the most in five years, and may outperform again this year amid record foreign purchases of the nation’s fixed-income securities.
The Bank of America Merrill Lynch Canada Broad Market Index, which tracks 1,150 federal, provincial and corporate bonds with a par value [...]
Tags: AIG, au, bank, bank of america, banking, banking system, ben, budget deficit, Canada, company, credit market, crisis, Debt, debt crisis, deficit, dollar, economist, economists, economy, energy, euro, euro zone, Europe, fed, federal government, glo, Global Economy, government, inflation, interest rate, interest rates, Invest, investment, investor, investors, lender, money, new york, oil, rate, recession, sales, us, weak economy
Increase In Mortgage Rates Predictions
December 22nd, 2010 by Financial Writer
The current mortgage interest rate forecast for the United States is the mortgage interest will remain at historically low levels in November until after the election, and then start rising too high. Homeowners in the United States can not presume that mortgage rates are at low levels historically, as it has since been a [...]
Tags: au, bank, banks, crisis, dollar, economic, fed, financial, financial system, foreclosure, foreclosures, homeowners, housing, housing market, increase, inflation, interest rate, interest rates, loan, loans, mortgage, mortgage rates, mortgages, oil, oil prices, owners, rate, sales, subprime mortgages, the dollar, united states, us
Pertamina, Exxon Sign Deal to Develop Gas Project
December 3rd, 2010 by Financial Writer
Pertamina and Exxon Mobil signed a preliminary agreement to co-develop the offshore East Natuna Block, paving the way to extract natural gas from the massive block located in the South China Sea.
Projects like Natuna and Chevron Corp.’s deep-water Gendalo-Gehem gas development are helping to restore Indonesia’s status as a major oil and gas [...]
Tags: China, company, dow jones, Gas producer, oil, ubs, us
Aug. trade deficit narrows unexpectedly to $30.7B
October 9th, 2009 by Financial Writer
The U.S. trade deficit unexpectedly narrowed in August as exports posted a small gain, while imports fell on a big drop in demand for foreign oil.
The Commerce Department said Friday that the trade deficit declined 3.5 percent to $30.7 billion, surprising economists who had expected higher oil prices to push the imbalance to $33 billion. [...]
Tags: economists, exports, Global Economy, obama, oil, recession








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