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Data back to 1870 show similarities in the worst banking system shocks — focusing on loose lending before a meltdown
 
            
    
    
  
Private equity investors weigh the total cost of capital — not just debt, but equity as well — when pursuing buyouts
 
            
    
    
  
They don’t trade at an absolute equal to intrinsic value, despite their image as the world’s investment bedrock
 
            
    
    
  
Investors in leveraged companies take on extra risk, but research indicates they see no offsetting return
 
            
    
    
  
Loans that include a sweetener or penalty tied to ESG performance seem to induce more honest reporting
 
            
    
    
  
Federal loan modification program led borrowers to default
 
            
    
    
  
34,334 letters were sent to test how sensitive those owing back taxes are to neighbors’ knowledge of the debts
 
            
    
    
  
Research reveals that those wary of payday loans tend to manage their finances better
 
            
    
    
  
The Fed’s gambit didn’t trigger a home-price recovery, but research shows it reduced subprime foreclosure risk
 
            
    
    
  
Friends lending to friends, taxpayers bailing out businesses feel it’s still their money and have opinions on how it’s spent
 
            
    
    
  
A predictive model employs credit default swaps across currencies
 
            
    
    
  
Sixty years of data suggest retirement obligations rise after Democrats scrape into office
 
            
    
    
  
The populist model, embraced by some on the American left, resembles policy that helped torpedo some smaller economies
 
            
    
    
  
Poorer residents of states refusing to expand Medicaid hit hardest
 
            
    
    
  
When bad times hit, highly indebted companies often have to sell operations and equipment at fire-sale prices