May 17 (Bloomberg Law) — Last week JP Morgan Chase acknowledged a trading loss of at least billion, fueling calls by some observers for more regulation of financial institutions. Chris Whalen, a Senior Managing Director at Tangent Capital Partner, tells Bloomberg Law’s Lee Pacchia that it was actually too much regulation that led to the loss. Jeff Madrick, a Senior Fellow at the Roosevelt Institute, maintains instead that regulators need to clamp down on financial institutions if the dangers of such losses are to be minimized.

Over the next five years, market watchers predict home prices could go up 4% each year. Mark W. Boyer, the chief executive officer of Foundation Financial Group, notes that Jacksonville is not coming back as fast as south Florida, but the housing market did not fall as far. We’re looking at a fairly stable environment right now. There is not a huge increase, but what we are seeing is purchase increase and inventory shrink which is first stage in price increase. According to Boyer, a lot of buyers are opting for the 15- year-mortgages instead of the 30-year-mortgage because they are feeling more confidence in the market.

London Whale Harpoons Financial Markets

This morning, all of the major stock indexes around the world are trading lower. The catalyst for the decline comes as JP Morgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM) reports a $ 2 billion trading loss caused by the a trader known as the “London Whale.” Traders are now wondering if other firms have similar trading losses out there. Just last week, Prudential Financial Inc (NYSE:PRU) plummeted after reporting earnings. The company sited a large derivative trading loss as the reason for the poor earnings results. This news from JPM is now the second report by a major firm that has admittedly taken a large loss from derivative trading. JPM has been one of the most outspoken firms against the controversial Volker Rule which would eliminate banks from proprietary trading. Other leading financial equities such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE:GS), Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS), ProShares UltraShort Financials (ETF) (NYSEARCA:SKF) and BlackRock, Inc (NYSE:BLK) are all likely to be very volatile today.

Dan covers the morning financial news

Dan covers the morning financial news

Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert talk about the City of London being the center of financial terrorism via their frauds, with Wall Street not being far behind. Iceland being the only country to refuse to capitulate to fraudster bankers, and their economy is growing, while Greece submits to the bankers financial terrorism. Recorded from RT, Kieser Report, 23 February 2012.

www.StockMarketFunding.com Financial Crisis 2012 Worse than 2008, European Banking System on the Verge of Collapse. The scenario will likely fully play out in 2013 and we will see what central banks world wide to do postpone the selling and get the cash off the side lines to pump markets….

Follow us @ twitter.com twitter.com Welcome to Capital Account. Bernanke speaks and everyone seems to listen. In a speech today, he warned about the job market and said continued accommodative easy-money policies will be needed to make further progress. This has the financial press reading the tea leaves and saying more QE. Is it really because, as our guest says — TBTF really means “trust Bernanke to fund?” She’s Janet Tavakoli, author of “The New Robber Barons: How Bankers created an International Oligarchy,” and she’s here to talk about the too big to fail banks, the financial oligarchy, and how MF Global fits into this web of derivative inspired meth lab of shadow liquidity and off-balance sheet risk. And since we are on the issue of MF Global, what’s the latest on its former CEO, Jon Corzine? Did he or didn’t he knowingly transfer close to 200 million dollars in customer money from MF Global to JP Morgan on one occasion before the firm imploded? Internal emails that have come out reportedly point different ways. Regardless, has he gotten away with other types of fraud already? And do credit derivatives, like those used to bet the firm on Europe’s debt crisis, continue to pose a major risk to markets? And does regulation do anything to stop this? To top this off, a recent report by the OECD predicts that by 2020, 75% of the US population will be obese. We’ll ask if this is deflationary for the global economy and a drag on economic growth. Jim Cramer, of CNBC seems to

March 13 Financial News

March 13 Financial News

Follow us @ twitter.com twitter.com A US lawmaker is reportedly planning to introduce the “Sound Dollar Act” early next month. This is legislation that would move the federal reserve from its dual mandate of maintaining price stability (which is anathema to the dollar debasement that it creates through its massive money printing operations) and keeping unemployment low (which it has failed to do…curious…) to just promoting price stability. Hmmm…what would that mean for the Fed’s unofficial mandate of trashing the dollar? And Turkey, the fastest growing economy after China, is being penalized in the credit markets for failing to promote consumer savings, according to bloomberg. What? You mean savings matter!! That’s amazing…ummm not to us it isn’t. You can’t have economic growth without savings, because you can’t have investment without capital. Capital comes form savings, and growth comes from investment, but its shocking how many people think money “grows on tress.” Can you blame them, when we have a serial money printer at the Federal Reserve, pushing us all into serfdom and neo-feudalism with a policy of perpetual bailouts and zero percent interest rates? Oligarchy here we come! Finally, with central bank policies of the fed and ECB amounting to –trash for cash — as economist David McWilliams puts it with his “Punk Economics: Lesson 2,” turning “water into wine.” These perpetual bailouts are nothing other than an institutional form of wealth transfer. They

Women in America Financial Health

Women in America Financial Health

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