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That 4% Gain Doesn’t Look So Bad After Madoff: William Pesek

Dec. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesia has a scandal on its hands, and it involves gross domestic product.

That won’t sound too serious to observers worried about corruption or anti-pornography laws intensifying debates about Islam’s role in public. Yet what might best be described as the “4 percent crisis” is getting breathless press coverage.

That’s the dismal rate at which many expect the economy will grow next year. What, did someone say dismal? When you look around the world, it’s hard to think of a sizeable economy that might perform at even close to 4 percent.

Hank, Let Me Help You Help This Great Country: Michael Lewis

Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) --

To: Henry Paulson

From: Michael Lewis

Re: My TARP Funding

Dear Secretary Paulson:

First, allow me to explain that unfortunate incident the other morning in the Treasury men’s room. I failed to observe best practices.

China Could Be Dragged Down by Wall Street Crash: William Pesek

Commentary by William Pesek

Oct. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Few questions confound economists more: What might tip China into the meltdown that so many have feared for so many years?

Possibilities include overheating, social instability, corruption, pollution, debt crises, war over Taiwan and a post- Olympics growth swoon. It's a perfectly rational expectation. No rapidly industrializing nation has ever avoided some kind of crisis, least of all upstarts in Asia.

Why Mark-to-Paulson Accounting Won't Save Banks: Jonathan Weil

Sept. 25 (Bloomberg) -- There's one glaring weakness in Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson's plan to save the U.S. financial system: We know what the plan is. Any other problems with it are mere details.

Much like the credo of Brad Pitt's character in the 1999 movie ``Fight Club,'' the first rule of market manipulation is you don't talk about market manipulation.

Crude Oil - Commentary from Ansbacher | Tim Price

Few things stir the blood more than Wall Street firms getting into a good old scrap. Put aside the internecine squabbling at Morgan Stanley - they don't come much better than the current dust-up between Citigroup (metals "super cycle") and Goldman Sachs (oil "super spike"), and Merrill Lynch - whose chief equity strategist, David Bowers, on Monday poured water on the idea of what he described as a resources bubble.

What did I say then?

Jetspeed + Axis (9 years 7 weeks ago):

When combining Apache Jetspeed and...

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