Where the economy is going and who will benefit and who will lose, at this point, it’s all about inflation.
66 search results for: Deloitte Abandons More London Office Space
ECONOMIC UPDATE – MARKET OVERVIEW
While the Dow posted its longest winning streak since December, the plantation workers of Slavelandia—people that used to be called middle and lower class—are on a losing streak.
TOP TREND 2024: BANKS GO BUST
Despite a strong economy, several major banks muted their earnings forecast for this year, citing the need to pay higher interest on customers’ deposits.
TOP TREND 2024: BANKS GO BUST
Faced with a looming wave of wobbly commercial real estate (CRE) loans coming due, banks seem to be granting many lenders extensions of their maturity dates to give them more time to either refinance those loans or scrape together more capital to qualify for a new loan.
TOP TREND 2024: BANKS GO BUST
Four private equity firms have together spent a reported $1.05 billion to buy stock in the ailing New York Community Bancorp (NYCB).
And the number of U.S. banks showing problems soared from eight to 52 in last year’s final three months, the sharpest spike since…
SPOTLIGHT: BANKS GO BUST
A dramatic increase in late payments on commercial real estate (CRE) loans is sharply shrinking cash reserves that major U.S. banks have set aside to cover such losses.
ECONOMIC UPDATE – MARKET OVERVIEW
Stocks dropped on Tuesday after hotter-than-expected inflation data for January spiked Treasury yields and raised doubts that the Federal Reserve would be able to cut rates several times this year, a key part of the bull case for the equity market.
TOP TREND 2024: BANKS GO BUST
In 2023, $541 billion in loans against commercial real estate came due, data service Trepp reported, the highest amount ever for a single year.
BANKS GO BUST
For 2023, one of our Top Trends was Office Building Bust. Hardly reported in the mainstream business media is the escalating commercial office building crisis that we had forecast some three years ago.
CORPORATE BANKRUPTCIES RISE BY DOUBLE DIGITS
In advanced economies, business failures are climbing at a double-digit rate compared to last year as governments’ $10-trillion COVID-era support programs end and central banks’ high interest rates continue, the Financial Times reported.