Update on Wall St.

with Joe Nocera and Byron Wien
in Current Affairs, Business
on Friday, October 16, 2009 * * * * *

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Update on Wall St. with Joe Nocera of The New York Times and Byron Wien, Vice Chairman of Blackstone Advisory Services LP

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Keywords:
Goldman
Economic
global
Invest
crisis
money
World
Financial
Bank
Wall St. Lehman
economy

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  • Comments 4
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    1. futurevisionaries  04/22/2011 03:20 PM Report

      Joe,

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    2. ion  02/18/2010 02:49 AM Report

      sorry, my previous comment was for the buffet interview, it should have been:

      ------

      this video does not play because the url referenced by flowplayer is wrong, but I was able to access it by downloading and using vlc to play it

      instead of:

      http://charlierose.http.internapcdn.net/charlierose/digitalgrill_content/http://charlierose.http.inte rnapcdn.net/charlierose/digitalgrill_content/101609_1.flv

      the url should be:

      http://charlierose.http.internapcdn.net/charlierose/digitalgrill_content/101609_1.flv

    3. ion  02/18/2010 02:46 AM Report

      this video does not play because the url referenced by flowplayer is wrong, but I was able to access it by downloading and using vlc to play it

      instead of:

      http://charlierose.http.internapcdn.net/charlierose/digitalgrill_content/http://charlierose.http.inte rnapcdn.net/charlierose/digitalgrill_content/buffett_2.flv

      the url should be:

      http://charlierose.http.internapcdn.net/charlierose/digitalgrill_content/buffett_2.flv

    4. REMant  01/13/2010 01:50 AM Report

      The earnings are either derived from the govt or write downs, while consumption and consumption related business is way down, foreclosures and defaults are increasing and the investments are not being made by ordinary investors or mutual funds, but by hedgefunds and large institutions like pension funds. Without employment increase nothing will change about this, and I don't see how anyone can say the stock or credit mkts here or "around the world" represent recovery. I'd go further and say it likely promises another bust, whether we have more regulation of not, and the reason will be because the Fed is still printing money and the govt spending it. The best regulation will be stopping up this pipeline and requiring higher capital requirements for all. This will make them simply not too big, not too big to fail. The stock market is not an indicator of prosperity, but only of booms and busts, and it moves in opposition to the real economy. When the markets go up on easy money and the merger business cranks up it is a sign of decline, because prices go down and businesses start up when an economy is actually growing. Wein understands the investment bankers okay, but he is a typical Wall St inflationist like a century's worth of his predecessors.