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The Motley Fool December 17, 2007 Christopher Singley |
A Capital Idea Deflated by the credit crisis, business development company American Capital looks like a bargain.  |
Registered Rep. December 12, 2007 John Churchill |
Dykstra Pitches Annuities To Rich Athletes Lenny Dykstra wants professional athletes to invest with him. The baseball star turned financial analyst is now touting a financial advice/lifestyle magazine to pro athletes.  |
The Motley Fool December 14, 2007 Matt Koppenheffer |
Goldman's Superhuman! Goldman Sachs' windfall from betting against the mortgage market amounts to roughly $4 billion for the 2007 fiscal year.  |
The Motley Fool December 14, 2007 Seth Jayson |
Senate Passes Taxpayer Subprime Bailout The Senate, nearly unanimously, passed a bill that would allow the Federal Housing Administration to insure bigger mortgages with lower down payments.  |
BusinessWeek December 13, 2007 Smith & Epstein |
Wal-Mart Banks on the 'Unbanked' Banco Wal-Mart, the chain's new lending operation in its Mexican stores, hopes to capture some of the 2.5 million customers who walk through their doors daily.  |
BusinessWeek December 13, 2007 Epstein & Smith |
Compartamos: From Nonprofit to Profit Behind the gentle image that Mexico's Banco Compartamos portrays there is a tough, highly lucrative bank.  |
Bank Systems & Technology December 6, 2007 Maria Bruno-Britz |
UBOC In Outsourcing Deal with iGATE San Francisco-based Union Bank of California signed a technology services agreemet with integrated technology operations company iGATE.  |
The Motley Fool December 13, 2007 Matt Koppenheffer |
Feelin' All Right at Lehman All in all, stakeholders in Lehman Brothers should be pretty pleased with the way the firm has held up during the market turmoil. Lehman may be quietly doing a lot of things right.  |
The Motley Fool December 13, 2007 Tom Hutchinson |
USB: A Textbook Play for Today's Market US Bancorp is one of the largest and most profitable banks in the country, and one of the most unjustly victimized in the sub-prime mess.  |
The Motley Fool December 13, 2007 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
You Really Do Hate Financial Stocks The five companies with the greatest increases in shorted shares during the second half of November were: Fannie Mae... Mylan... Countrywide... Washington Mutual... Freddie Mac...  |
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