Nomi Prins | TalkMarkets | Page 6
Author, Journalist & Speaker
Nomi Prins is a renowned journalist, author and speaker. Her most recent book, more

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The People Vs. Federal Bank Settlements And Liquidity Rules
Despite causing a global economic crisis, the Big Six Banks were successfully able to negotiate settlements reflecting just 1% of their assets. And a deeper look at the new banking liquidity rules which do little to protect from another catastrophe.
Dodd-Frank Turns Four And Nothing Fundamental Has Changed
Let’s go back in time, to [consider] how the Glass-Steagall Act came about. We had a major crash in 1929. It was the result of a tremendous amount of speculation,..
Declaration Of Independence In The 21st Century
While much of America marks July 4th with fireworks, barbecues and family gatherings, we should also take a moment to pause and consider the state of our freedoms, liberties and rights.
APB Excerpt: Woodrow Wilson & Jack Morgan July 1913 Secret WWI Prep
It discusses Woodrow Wilson and Jack Morgan’s collaboration to finance the Allies in the early days of World War I, illuminating one of the strongest examples of the intimate cooperation between the presidency and the highest levels of private banking.
All The Presidents' Bankers Excerpt: World Bank, IMF, Globalizing Wall Street
Just after the United States entered World War II, two simultaneous initiatives unfolded that would dictate elements of financing after the war, through the joint initiatives of foreign policy measures and private banking whims.
From J.P. Morgan To Jamie Dimon
New York is a wonderful town — if you run a mega bank. Because for over a century, the Big Six banks and their leaders have dominated not just the U.S. banking industry, but American and global finance.
Another Excerpt: All The Presidents' Bankers: Nixon's War/Wall Street's War
While the protests against the Vietnam War intensified in the first years of the Nixon administration, the financial elite was fighting its own war—over the future of banking and against Glass-Steagall regulations.
Excerpt: All The Presidents' Bankers: The Justice Department Goes Soft
Many congressional hearings and investigations have probed the bankers' practices since the crisis that began in 2007. Similar to the Pujo hearings after the Panic of 1907, though, they have resulted in nothing material against the bankers with the strongest political alliances.
The Seven Sins Of Wall Street By Bob Ivry - My Book Review
The Seven Sins of Wall Street: Big Banks, their Washington Lackeys, and the next Financial Crisis by Bloomberg reporter, Bob Ivry is both incredibly scary and ironically extremely funny – in a very dark way.
Book Review: How To Make A Million Dollars An Hour
Les Leopold’s latest masterpiece, “How to Make a Million Dollars an Hour: Why Hedge Funds Get Away With Siphoning Off America’s Wealth,” is necessary, alarming and... funny.
Volcker Rule Made Meaningless By Abundant Exemptions
They say the devil is in the details. Regarding the Volcker Rule, the devil is in the details of its abundant exemptions.
When $13B Is Less Than Meets The Eye
JPMorgan gets off cheap, writes a former Goldman Sachs managing director.
Book Review: Beautiful Souls - Saying No, Breaking Ranks, And Heeding The Voice Of Conscience In Dark Times
Eyal Press' book is a stunning, deeply stirring collection of true stories about the most unlikely of heroes: four men and one woman who chose uncomfortable, and in some cases potentially lethal, courses of action because they could envision doing nothing else.
The Fed’s Employment-Taper Myth, Big Six Bank Stocks, And Downgrades
There is a prevailing myth that the Fed’s bond purchase programs are somehow akin to job fairs. Yet, since the Fed began its buying policies,the real beneficiaries have been the Big Six banks: JPM Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.
81 to 94 of 94 Posts
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