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Saturday, November 21, 
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— Henry Paulson —

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Editor's Note

Editor's letter: Nov. 16, 2009

Beneath the veneer of Wall Streeters beats the same heart, stirred by the same determinants of behavior.


Regulatory

Of politics and pay

How to fix executive compensation rules without breaking the companies.


Industry Insight

Before the honeymoon ends

Thinking differently about conflict resolution.


Judgment Call

The price of R&D

FAS 141(R): A new source of shareholder litigation against innovation-driven companies?



Entries tagged "Henry Paulson"

Last rites

As the Lehman remembrance festival ends, some former insiders offer thoughts on Dick Fuld, Henry Paulson and what went wrong.


In search of the uber-mensch

AIG chairman Edward Liddy takes his lumps testifying before Congress.


TALF to the rescue

The program should be expanded to address existing troubled assets.


A year unlike any other

Turmoil. Chaos. Bailouts. Conventional deals in 2008 were rare. Many of those that mattered, like Bear Stearns and J.P. Morgan Chase, involved the government.


The turning point

The decision to send Lehman into bankruptcy marked the shift from a financial crisis to a market meltdown.


Opening drive

Obama tackles an intractable foe -- the college football bowl system.


A matter of interpretation

Did fair-value accounting deepen the crisis or provide the remedy? Does the market provide a rational view of true value or a procyclical blast of emotion? The debate roars on, with no end in sight.


Grave dancers

The heavy hitters lay retrospective claims to the meltdown of '08. Can this crisis be tarted up into bestsellers without the presence of splashy villains?


Saving Lehman

If the government had bailed out the investment bank, would anything have changed?


Let's look at the numbers

Bailout sums are huge. How huge? Bigger than NASA, bigger than the wars. But that's not the whole picture.


Be careful what you wish for

In the U.K., bank CEOs called for state aid and had second thoughts when the strings were attached.


Look out!

Here comes a new year.


Folly-la-la-la

We're rolling out the Barrel Awards for private equity's notable--if dubious--achievements this year.


The elephant in the room

Whether it's single-cause explanations or the lone-bogeyman blame game, the media struggled to explain the unexplainable.


Transactions: Dec. 15, 2008

We're all faced with the unsettling feeling that everything has changed while we were sleeping. But no one's been hit harder than Treasury's Henry Paulson.


Buyouts and banks

A once-promising relationship has been marked by disaster, so what lessons are there for investors still intrigued by the bargains?


Alive and kicking

Thomas Weisel Partners president Lionel Conacher sees reason for hope amid the wreckage.


Transactions: Dec. 1, 2008

As we move forward, replacing our old experts with new, how much of the old do we abandon and how much do we keep? Consider the case of the Federal Reserve.


So much for all that

Remember the emergency, three-page bailout plan to buy toxic securities? Well, never mind.


Beneath the TARP

Whatever happened to Treasury buying toxic assets? Maybe the feds figured consolidation is a faster road to stability.


Paulson tries Plan B

Treasury is now considering how to revive the market for asset-backed securities.


Hammerin' Hank

In which we track the wandering peregrinations of a bailout story from its source in boring wonkery to its final resting place on outraged cable.


Economist in chief

The new president and his economic team face daunting issues that leave no time for dallying. Here are some clues for what to expect in the early days of the Barack Obama administration.


Pay scale justice

With the bailout come strings, but will limits on executive pay work?


The ownership society

Now that taxpayers have taken stakes in at least some of the nation's banks, the leash should begin to tighten. Right?


Role reversal

On government bailouts, he led the way, but Gordon Brown's new popularity may be short-lived.


Remember the bailout?

Examining the implementation of the deal that was supposed to re-energize the credit markets.


Cut to the chase

The Labour government suddenly regained its self-confidence, so why didn't it tackle the banking crisis head-on?


Paulson taps a bailout chief

The man for that gargantuan task, at least for now, is Neel Kashkari.


Transactions: Oct. 13, 2008

Nobody seems to know what to do about bubbles, even as finance consolidates. Meanwhile, we're already preparing elements of the conventional wisdom for the next bubble.


Big, big and beyond

America's banking giants may face more rule-making zeal, but the crisis so far has produced only more deregulation.


Transactions: Oct. 6, 2008

Wall Street may be dead but delveraging looks very much alive. How long, however, after the crisis passes will Americans restrain their inner Wall Street?


The only game in town

There have been plenty of ideas for how to deal with the credit crisis, but all have been drowned out by the administration's call for Wall Street's bailout.


Cohen, Herlihy country's top banking M&A lawyers

Like Wachtell's Edward Herlihy, Sullivan & Cromwell's Rodgin Cohen has been busy, representing Fannie, AIG and Lehman Brothers amid the financial crisis.


Fundamentals on steroids

Henry Paulson: The Man, the Myth, the tween pop sensation.


Bailouts 101

Know whose morals you are hazarding. That's one of several lessons Paulson took from Northern Rock.


A children's story

Bazookas, bailouts and carny games: How the media brought Fannie and Freddie crashing down to earth.


Out of order

The regulatory system that oversees America's stressed-out financial industry needs an overhaul, but don't expect any big changes soon.


Movers & shakers: July 22, 2008

Ken Wilson, chairman of Goldman, Sachs & Co.'s financial institutions group will help with the country's banking crisis. The move is not temporary, according to...


Transactions

Behind the kerfluffle over Fannie and Freddie, rumors and shorts, Congress still seems to believe that the Federal Reserve is the only answer to our woes. Doesn't anyone out there have an alternative?


Mistrust and verify

A conversation with Rep. Frank Wolf on how to approach sovereign wealth funds.



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