dimelab dimelab: shrinking the gap between talk and action.

Jones Topic in The Credit Debacle Catalog

Alison Jones (1); Mother Jones (4).

Rajiv Sethi Tue 2010-06-15 14:25 EDT

Defenders and Demonizers of Credit Default Swaps

The recent difficulties faced by Greece (and some other eurozone states) in rolling over their national debt has let some to blame hedge fund involvement in the market for credit default swaps...Leaving aside the question of whether naked CDS trading has been good or bad for Greece, it is worth asking whether there exist mechanisms through which such contracts can ever have destabilizing effects. I believe that they can, for reasons that Salmon and Jones would do well to consider...such contracts allow pessimists to leverage (much more so than they could if they were to short bonds instead). The resulting increase in the cost of borrowing, which will rise in tandem with higher CDS spreads, can make the difference between solvency and insolvency. And recognition of this process can tempt those who are not otherwise pessimistic to bet on default, as long as they are confident that enough of their peers will also do so. This clearly creates an incentive for coordinated manipulation...

Credit Default Swap; defending; demonic; Rajiv Sethi.

Thu 2010-01-07 19:31 EST

Capital City | Mother Jones

A year after the biggest bailout in US history, Wall Street lobbyists don't just have influence in Washington. They own it lock, stock, and barrel...This is a story about politics. It's about how Congress and the president and the Federal Reserve were persuaded to let all this happen in the first place. In other words, it's about the finance lobby--the people who, as Sen. Dick Durbin [5] (D-Ill.) put it [6] last April, even after nearly destroying the world are "still the most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. And they frankly own the place."...It's about the way that lobby--with the eager support of a resurgent conservative movement and a handful of powerful backers--was able to fundamentally change the way we think about the world. Call it a virus. Call it a meme. Call it the power of a big idea. Whatever you call it, for three decades they had us convinced that the success of the financial sector should be measured not by how well it provides financial services to actual consumers and corporations, but by how effectively financial firms make money for themselves. It sounds crazy when you put it that way, but stripped to its bones, that's what they pulled off.

capital city; Mother Jones.

Tue 2009-06-16 00:00 EDT

Is Geithner's Hedge-Fund Bailout Illegal? | Mother Jones

Is Geithner's Hedge-Fund Bailout Illegal? by Zach Carter | Mother Jones; ``yet another windfall for the rascals who got us here''

Geithner's Hedge-Fund Bailout Illegal; Mother Jones.

Tue 2009-04-21 00:00 EDT

Top Geithner Aide Fought CEO Pay Reform | Mother Jones

former Goldman Sachs lobbyist Mark Patterson

Mother Jones; Top Geithner Aide Fought CEO Pay Reform.

Thu 2008-03-13 00:00 EDT

Finding a catalog

generating analytical catalog records from well-structured digital texts, by David Mimno, Alison Jones, Gregory Crane (2005); named-entity extraction

catalog; find.