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At stake, from SIFMA's perspective, is the potential of the SEC to revive the exemption in the future.
August 11 -
Kathy Hochul, a 62-year-old Buffalo native, will become the state’s first female governor. The former congresswoman has been lieutenant governor since 2015.
August 11 -
A federal judge denied Nuveen's motion to dismiss Preston Hollow's antitrust lawsuit concluding a "plausible" claim exists to proceed. PHC faces a tougher legal road ahead in proving its rival orchestrated a damaging boycott.
August 11 -
Deputy budget director David Womack explains what generates investor confidence in the city. Paul Burton and Chip Barnett host. (14 minutes)
August 10 -
Chicago is accepting underwriter qualifications as it updates its investment banking pool; it also delayed the bidding deadline for potential casino developers.
August 10 -
Even if the Oversight Board can legally approve new debt for the deal, some market participants say the future "willingness to pay" is the larger consideration.
August 9 -
Rising sea levels could make catastrophic events such as recent subway flooding more intense and frequent in places including New York and Boston.
August 6 -
The board will say it has treated the creditors fairly, it meets the 'best interest' test for debtors, and its plan preempts dozens of local laws.
August 6 -
The city has issued a second set of bonds to fund 266 housing units that are the first of some 8,000 planned on adjoining islands in the San Francisco Bay.
August 5 -
Sen. Patrick Toomey, the ranking Republican on the Banking Committee, has argued that research by the Federal Reserve into these topics could result in “mission creep.” Fed officials have said their job includes fostering inclusive economic growth and ensuring the banking system is girded against financial risks posed by climate change.
August 4 -
Judge Swain also allowed Debt Recovery Authority bondholders efforts to protect their collateral to continue.
August 4 -
With all eyes on Friday’s employment report, since several additional strong months of gains are needed for the Federal Reserve to be comfortable announcing a tapering of its asset purchases, Wednesday’s news could signal trouble.
August 4 -
Mayor Mike Duggan dodged what he considered a $2 billion fiscal bullet in the form of charter revisions as he heads to a November run-off seeking a third term
August 4 -
The board will have 15 members for its fiscal year starting Oct. 1.
August 4 -
Effective spread data yielded interesting results about the way corporate and municipal bonds were treated by Fed backstop programs.
August 4 -
The Federal Reserve is on track to begin increasing interest rates in 2023 if the economy performs as policy makers are projecting, Vice Chairman Richard Clarida said Wednesday.
August 4 -
The board decided last month it would seek commission approval to tweak rules related to mandatory disclosures.
August 3 -
President Joe Biden has a tough decision in choosing the next Federal Reserve chair: Play it safe by giving Jerome Powell a second term or take a chance on a liberal like Lael Brainard, who would please progressives in Congress yet potentially agitate Wall Street.
August 3 -
Joe Kalish, chief global macro strategist at Ned Davis Research, discusses his thoughts on when the Federal Reserve will announce it will cut back on its asset purchases, the possibility of Chair Jerome Powell’s re-nomination and what to expect from the Jackson Hole summit. Gary Siegel hosts (27 minutes)
August 3 -
Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said that if the next two monthly U.S. employment reports show continued gains, he could back an announcement soon on scaling back the central bank’s bond purchases.
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