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Federal relief and the resumption of elective surgeries helped bolster hospital margins in May, according to a Kaufman Hall report.
June 25 -
Two Federal Reserve presidents say it's gotten harder to predict what will happen with the economy.
June 25 -
Rep. French Hill, R-Ark., said the SEC's temporary relief for MAs to facilitate some private placement deals without registering as a broker-dealer should not have been created through exemptive relief.
June 25 -
At least nine states have enacted across-the-board budget cuts in response to the sudden revenue shortfalls caused by the economic shutdown resulting from stay-at-home orders.
June 25 -
Protecting the tax-exempt status of municipal bonds and reviving Build America Bonds are priorities for the New Partnership on Infrastructure.
June 25 -
While reducing the FY21 spending plan to $87 billion, New York's mayor said he needs $1 billion in labor concessions or the city could lay off up to 22,000 workers.
June 25 -
In 15 years at Wilshire Consulting, he worked with public and corporate pension funds, foundations, endowments and insurance companies.
June 25 -
Cooper Howard, director of fixed income strategy at the Schwab Center for Financial Research, talks about the bifurcation in the market and what investors should look at during the rest of the year.
June 25 -
Despite criticism, the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board said the calculator will help track the timeliness of secondary market disclosures.
June 25 -
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The lawmakers argued in a letter to the Federal Reserve that suspending dividend payouts would be the "prudent course of action," allowing banks to build their capital cushions and continue lending during the coronavirus pandemic.
June 24 -
Municipal bond funds and ETFs saw combined inflows of $2.942 billion in the week ended June 17, ICI said.
June 24 -
The state's flagship university returns to the market after S&P Global Ratings improved its rating outlook and Moody's Investors Service lowered it.
June 24 -
The mass transit agency is staring at a prolonged fiscal calamity with further federal support at a standstill and its $51.5 billion capital program in jeopardy.
June 24 -
Recurring coronavirus outbreaks will probably hold back U.S. economic growth and leave unemployment at elevated levels in the coming years, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Charles Evans said.
June 24 -
The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, which has been on life support for years, is expected to close if the measure fails.
June 24 -
State auditors will continue to be represented on the Governmental Accounting Standards Board after Chairman David Vaudt ends his term June 30 although not as the chairman.
June 24 -
Student housing projects financed through public-private partnerships face a far more lethal blow if the coronavirus pandemic prevents college campuses from opening this fall.
June 24 -
With states opening back up, economists look at the recovery and how another wave of coronavirus would affect the economy.
June 24 -
As officials in the tourism-dependent county prepare for a resurgence of tourism as attractions reopen, they are also dealing with a surge of COVID-19 cases.
June 24



























