Berny Man falou e...
2 mensagens
|Página 1 de 1
O gajo (o Berny Man) tem calls e está caladinho que é por causa das coisas - acho que o Tio Green é que andava em puts a semana passada.
Abraço e obrigada, Infoo (este obrigado é extensivo aos dados das 15, que por falecimento temporario do Caldeirão, não consegui agradeçer)
Abraço e obrigada, Infoo (este obrigado é extensivo aos dados das 15, que por falecimento temporario do Caldeirão, não consegui agradeçer)
Esta é a vantagem da ambição:
Podes não chegar á Lua
Mas tiraste os pés do chão...
Podes não chegar á Lua
Mas tiraste os pés do chão...
Berny Man falou e...
..via satellite para a convenção de "Independent Community Bankers of America", e a única ferroada que deu foi na Fannie e na Freddie, coisa já apontada a dedo pelo GreenMan.
No entanto, a altura em que a bronca destas amigas provoquem um crash ainda está para vir.
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- Government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should retain mortgages or mortgage-backed securities for their investment portfolios only in order to fulfill "a clear and well-defined public purpose," Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Tuesday.
Speaking via satellite to an Independent Community Bankers of America convention, Bernanke said that the portfolios currently held by the companies "continue to represent a potentially significant source of systemic risk." Read his prepared remarks.
"The Federal Reserve Board believes that the GSEs' investment portfolios should be firmly anchored to a measurable public purpose, such as the promotion of affordable housing," Bernanke said in remarks prepared for delivery to the convention.
Together, Fannie Mae (FNM : 54.18, +1.06, +2.0%) and Freddie Mac (FRE : 62.08, +0.72, +1.2%) hold about $1.4 trillion in investment portfolios.
Bernanke made no comments about the economy or monetary policy in his prepared remarks.
The Fed chairman also said he supports giving the companies' regulator stronger supervisory powers and receivership power.
Lawmakers are currently debating tougher rules for Fannie and Freddie after failing to pass a bill in the last Congress.
Bernanke's predecessor, Alan Greenspan, was also critical of the size of the companies' holdings, saying it posed risks to the financial markets.
Both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are still in the process of returning to regular financial reporting after weathering company-rocking accounting scandals. Freddie Mac was forced to restate $5 billion in earnings, while Fannie Mae's earnings were cut by $6.3 billion after a multi-year restatement.
Shares of Fannie Mae were recently trading at $54.10, up 1.8%, while shares of Freddie Mac were up 1% at $61.97.
Fannie Mae is planning to file its 2005 financial report before the end of August and its 2006 report by the end of this year.
Freddie Mac, which is the second-largest buyer of home mortgages, is planning to report its full-year 2006 financial results by the end of the first quarter of 2007, according to CEO Richard Syron
No entanto, a altura em que a bronca destas amigas provoquem um crash ainda está para vir.
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- Government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should retain mortgages or mortgage-backed securities for their investment portfolios only in order to fulfill "a clear and well-defined public purpose," Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Tuesday.
Speaking via satellite to an Independent Community Bankers of America convention, Bernanke said that the portfolios currently held by the companies "continue to represent a potentially significant source of systemic risk." Read his prepared remarks.
"The Federal Reserve Board believes that the GSEs' investment portfolios should be firmly anchored to a measurable public purpose, such as the promotion of affordable housing," Bernanke said in remarks prepared for delivery to the convention.
Together, Fannie Mae (FNM : 54.18, +1.06, +2.0%) and Freddie Mac (FRE : 62.08, +0.72, +1.2%) hold about $1.4 trillion in investment portfolios.
Bernanke made no comments about the economy or monetary policy in his prepared remarks.
The Fed chairman also said he supports giving the companies' regulator stronger supervisory powers and receivership power.
Lawmakers are currently debating tougher rules for Fannie and Freddie after failing to pass a bill in the last Congress.
Bernanke's predecessor, Alan Greenspan, was also critical of the size of the companies' holdings, saying it posed risks to the financial markets.
Both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are still in the process of returning to regular financial reporting after weathering company-rocking accounting scandals. Freddie Mac was forced to restate $5 billion in earnings, while Fannie Mae's earnings were cut by $6.3 billion after a multi-year restatement.
Shares of Fannie Mae were recently trading at $54.10, up 1.8%, while shares of Freddie Mac were up 1% at $61.97.
Fannie Mae is planning to file its 2005 financial report before the end of August and its 2006 report by the end of this year.
Freddie Mac, which is the second-largest buyer of home mortgages, is planning to report its full-year 2006 financial results by the end of the first quarter of 2007, according to CEO Richard Syron
- Mensagens: 1620
- Registado: 17/11/2005 1:02
2 mensagens
|Página 1 de 1
Quem está ligado:
Utilizadores a ver este Fórum: Ano nimus, Google [Bot], Google Adsense [Bot], icemetal, m-m, Pimentel79, silva_39 e 155 visitantes