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- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 04.15.2010
Financial Reform Legislation Faces Uphill Battle in the Senate
Senator Christopher Dodd (D-CT), chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, introduced revised legislation to regulate the nation’s financial system. The plan would create a nine-member council, led by the Treasury secretary, to be on the alert for systemic risks, and direct the Federal Reserve to oversee the nation’s largest and most interconnected financial institutions. The […]
- Author:
- Matt Ward
- Posted:
- 04.13.2010
Government Expansion Will Fuel 2010 Office Absorption
The federal government will lead the office market recovery, especially in Washington, D.C. According to Jones Lang LaSalle’s 2010 U.S. Federal Government Perspective, the federal government will need at least 4,000,000 SF of new space nationally this year, though the lion’s share will be in the Washington, D.C. market. The need will be driven primarily […]
- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 04.08.2010
Fed Experiments With End to CMBS Purchases
The Federal Reserve is ending its purchase of mortgage-backed securities, a sign of confidence that the nation’s economic recovery is well underway. At the same time, the Fed voted to retain its benchmark interest rate at approximately zero percent, because of remaining economic weakness and the lack of inflation. According to the Fed, it will […]
- Author:
- Matt Ward
- Posted:
- 04.06.2010
Jobs Outlook Rosier
The jobs that economists, commercial real estate owners and others in the know have been expecting seem to be on the horizon. New data from the Department of Labor show a 64,000 net new payroll increase for November, although the numbers fell again in December, January and February. More information will be available when Labor […]
- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 04.02.2010
Kenneth Feinberg Widens Review of Rescued Bank Compensation
The nation’s pay czar is widening his review of how much money hundreds of banks paid their top executives during the 2008 financial crisis. Kenneth R. Feinberg, officially the Special Master for Executive Compensation, is asking for details on compensation at 419 banks that were bailed out by the Treasury Department’s Troubled Asset Relief Program […]
- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 03.31.2010
Volcker Rule Seeks to Regulate Financial Markets
A draft of President Barack Obama’s financial reform legislation has been sent to Congress. Dubbed the Volcker Rule in honor of the former Federal Reserve chairman’s aggressive pursuit of these regulations, the five-page proposal will ban proprietary trading and mergers that give banks more than a 10 percent market share as measured by liabilities that […]
- Author:
- Mark McDowell
- Posted:
- 03.30.2010
House Built of Old Tires Searching for a Mortgage
Families looking to refinance their mortgages don’t face quite the uphill battle that Jon and Laura Hagar have in their search for the right lender. That’s because the Hagars’ house in rural Hot Sulphur Springs, CO, is made of 17,000 old tires. The Hagars’ 2,700 SF house is built of stacked tire bales – five-foot-wide […]
- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 03.29.2010
TARP’s Price Tag: $109 Billion
The Congressional Budget Office has determined that the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) will cost the government $109 billion – just 16 percent of the $700 billion set aside to rescue the nation from the great recession. Insurance giant AIG and the auto industry are TARP’s largest beneficiaries. The federal government bought $40 billion in […]
- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 03.25.2010
The Canary in the Mine Shaft
A decade before the financial meltdown, one woman was sounding the alarm that a catastrophe was coming. That woman is Brooksley Born, who correctly predicted that investments known as over-the-counter derivatives could cause a financial crisis. As Chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) during the second Clinton administration, Born would wake up “in […]
- Author:
- Matt Ward
- Posted:
- 03.24.2010
Office Rents Could Be Close to Hitting Bottom
A combination of limited supply growth and anticipated stabilization of the jobs market could mean that office rents may return to positive growth sooner rather than later. That’s the opinion of Victor Calanog, a researcher at Reis, Inc., one of the nation’s leading providers of commercial real estate performance information and analysis. According to Calanog, […]