Posts Tagged ‘banks.’
Thursday, June 24th, 2010
More banks raise home loan rates
Two more banks have raised variable home loan rates, after ASB Bank broke ranks to pass on the Reserve Bank’s higher OCR rate to customers last week. ANZ and National Bank have lifted their mortgage and savings account rates to match the 25 basis point rise in OCR to 2.75% just over a week ago – the first rise in the OCR since July 2007. Floating rates for both banks are now below 6% — ANZ on 5 …
Read more on New Zealand’s National Business Review
Tags: banks., Home, Loan, More, raise, Rates
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Saturday, May 1st, 2010
Learn How To Get Paid By Starting A Foreclosure Cleaning Business For Mortgage Co.’s And Banks. Converts Like Crazy!! Better Than Survey Sites & Data Entry Sites. Check Out Photopayday.com Too. Affiliates Go To Http://preview.tinyurl.com/lm5uzd.
$Get Paid To CleanOut Foreclosed Homes For Mortgage Co.’s & Banks$.
Tags: $Get, banks., CleanOut, Co.'s, Foreclosed, Homes., Mortgage, Paid
Posted in Loan Articles | No Comments »
Thursday, April 22nd, 2010
Banks’ loan losses easing but demand down
NEW YORK/CHARLOTTE (Reuters) – Banks including Wells Fargo & Co reported first-quarter results that showed the loan losses that have plagued the financial sector amid the recession are easing.
Read more on Reuters
Tags: banks., demand, Down, easing, Loan, Losses
Posted in Loan News | No Comments »
Sunday, April 4th, 2010
College student loan changes cut out banks as middlemen
Bigger grants for college students who need them. Relaxed payment terms for students with loans. More money for community colleges.
Read more on USA Today
Tags: banks., Changes, College, Loan, middlemen, Student
Posted in Loan News | No Comments »
Saturday, April 3rd, 2010
Learn About The Techniques And Remedies That Stop The Foreclosure On Your Property Which Have Been Hidden From Us For Over 75 Years. Find Out Why The Banks Actually Do Not Have The Legal Authority To Foreclose.
Stop Foreclosure – Stop The Banks. Know Your Options.
Tags: banks., Foreclosure, Know, Options., stop
Posted in Loan Books | No Comments »
Friday, April 2nd, 2010
E-book Developed By Finance Professionals That Have Spent Years Working For Banks And Understand The Inner Workings Of The Banks. It Provides Tips And Tricks How To Make Money By Using Everyday Banking Products! Http://pruro.com/Affiliates/index.php.
Earn 50% On Beat The Banks E-book!!!
Tags: banks., Beat, Earn, EBook
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Friday, March 19th, 2010

Product Description
Many people want to tighten federal regulations governing the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs)—Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Home Loan Banks. But better regulations will not do much to reduce the real risks that the GSEs create for U.S. taxpayers and the economy, and aren’t likely to have real force. Fannie and Freddie are the most politically powerful companies in America. The S&L debacle of the late 1980s showed that politically powerful organizations can intimidate regulators and stave off tough regulation. Under these circumstances, privatization—the elimination of government backing—is the only viable way to protect the taxpayers and the economy against the consequences of major financial difficulties at one or more of the GSEs.
Opponents of privatization believe that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would be even more powerful as privatized entities. Fannie and Freddie would be able to obtain better financing than their competitors, according to this line of thinking. Concerns have also been raised about whether the privatization of Fannie and Freddie would disrupt the residential finance market or raise mortgage rates for home buyers.
The plans in this book together address these concerns. Thomas H. Stanton demonstrates that it is possible to cut the ties between the government and the GSEs—and to create a fully competitive private mortgage market—without disrupting the current system of residential mortgage finance. Financial consultant Bert Ely shows that it would be possible to obtain lower mortgage rates than currently offered by Fannie and Freddie, without any government involvement. The book presents a complete legislative proposal to enact these plans, along with a detailed section-by-section analysis of the bill.
Privatizing Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks: Why and How
Tags: banks., Fannie, Federal, Freddie, Home, Loan, Privatizing
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Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Product Description
Title: The Laws of the State of New York Relating to Banks, Banking, Trust Companies, Loan, Mortgage and Safe Deposit Corporations, Together With the Acts Affecting Moneyed Corporations Generally Under the Consolidated Laws of 1909, Also the National Bank Act as Amended, and Cognate United States Statutes Publisher: New York : Baker, Voorhis
The Laws of the State of New York Relating to Banks, Banking, Trust Companies, Loan, Mortgage and Safe Deposit Corporations, Together With the
Tags: Banking, banks., Companies, Corporations, Deposit, Laws, Loan, Mortgage, Relating, SAFE, State, Together, Trust, York
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Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Product Description
The present book criticizes the fact that profitability measures derived from capital market models such as the Sharpe ratio and the reward-to-VaR ratio are proposed for loan portfolios although it is not assessed whether their risk-return trade-offs are optimal for banks. This volume intends to fill this gap.
The approach of this work is to endogenously derive optimal risk-return trade-offs of commercial banks and to compare them with those of reward-to-risk ratios. The risk-return trade-offs for banks are derived taking into account market discipline, Basel I and Basel II regulatory capital requirements, and insured deposits.
It is found that even the reward-to-VaR ratio, which is explicitly developed for the purpose of valuating loan portfolios, can be highly misleading. The volume also helps in understanding risk management motives of banks, in particular, how market discipline, capital requirements, and insured deposits affect the decision-making of banks.
Optimal Risk-Return Trade-Offs of Commercial Banks: and the Suitability of Profitability Measures for Loan Portfolios
Tags: banks., Commercial, Loan, Measures, Optimal, Portfolios, Profitability, RiskReturn, Suitability, TradeOffs
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Tuesday, March 9th, 2010
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Product Description
This digital document is an article from Financial Management, published by Thomson Gale on December 22, 2006. The length of the article is 11007 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: A comparison of syndicated loan pricing at investment and commercial banks.
Author: Maretno Harjoto
Publication: Financial Management (Magazine/Journal)
Date: December 22, 2006
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Volume: 35 Issue: 4 Page: 49(22)
Distributed by Thomson Gale
A comparison of syndicated loan pricing at investment and commercial banks.: An article from: Financial Management
Tags: article, banks., Commercial, comparison, Financial, from, investment, Loan, Management, pricing, syndicated
Posted in Loan Books | No Comments »