exchange

1031 Exchange – Trade Real Estate Investments and Defer Taxable …

June 2, 2011

The “like kind” provision for Real property is quite broad and includes land, rental and commercial property ; any of which can be exchanged for the other. The “like kind” provision for personal property is more restrictive. … Your interest in a partnership cannot be traded for an interest in another partnership . Exception: The partnership “as an entity” can exchange real estate it owns for other like-kind real estate . D. Transfer between Spouses …

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Video: Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange to Offer Yuan Gold Futures

May 18, 2011

May 18 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Zeb Eckert reports on the Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange’s offering of yuan-denominated gold products. The Industrial & Commercial Bank of China-backed bourse plans to introduce dollar silver futures by June after trading of dollar-denominated gold futures begins today, Albert Helmig, president of the exchange, said. China is promoting the use of the yuan in global trade and investment to reduce its reliance on the dollar. Bloomberg’s Susan Li also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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The 10 Highest-Paid CEOs In 2010

May 6, 2011

(AP) The 50 highest-paid CEOs for 2010 in an Associated Press analysis for Standard & Poor’s 500 companies. The analysis includes companies that had the same CEO for all of 2009 and 2010 and that filed proxy statements with the Securities and Exchange Commission between Jan. 1 and April 30. They are based on the AP’s compensation formula, which adds up salary, perks, bonuses, preferential interest rates on pay set aside for later, and company estimates for the value of stock options and stock awards on the day they were granted last year. Source: Equilar Below are the top ten highest-paid CEOs of 2010

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Eric Schmidt Gets A Major Raise

April 19, 2011

According to an April 13th Securities and Exchange Commission filing, Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt is getting a huge raise . As CEO (before stepping down from the role in January), Schmidt was only bringing in $1 annually, and Google’s Board of Directors recently approved a new $1.25 million salary with a possible bonus of up to 400-percent. Life wasn’t too difficult for Schmidt during his ten years as CEO — he’s got loads of Google stock and Forbes ranked him as the 52nd richest American last year with his $4 billion net worth. The AFP notes, “Schmidt, who was replaced as CEO by Google co-founder Larry Page on April 4, can earn up to $6.0 million in 2011 through bonus payments, Google said in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.”

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Charles Gasparino: Duncan Niederauer Calling the Shots for NYSE Is Bad News for Shareholders

April 12, 2011

Duncan Niederauer, the CEO of the New York Stock Exchange, doesn’t like the people at the Nasdaq and Intercontinental Exchange much these days. He calls them “interlopers,” who are trying to mess up a good thing for NYSE shareholders and its employees with a rival bid designed to do nothing more than obliterate his grand plan to remake the exchange into a global power house by merging it with the Frankfurt-based Deutsche Börse. All of which sounds good until you realize the track record of the guy making those statements, who probably should have resigned or at the very least recused himself from deciding on the NYSE’s next move so a less conflicted and maybe more competent executive can make what might be the biggest decision in the NYSE 219-year history. First a little background on Niederauer : He’s one of a long line of Goldman executives who have been running the stock exchange since then CEO Hank Paulson (later the treasury secretary who failed to see the financial crisis until it was too late) led the effort to oust long-time CEO Dick Grasso in 2003. Paulson & Co., said they were doing the Wall Street equivalent of God’s work (sound familiar?). Grasso received a compensation package of around $140 million, and the public outcry over his oversized salary was endangering the exchange’s status as the world’s premier stock market. At least that was Paulson’s spin; the reality was much different. Goldman had been prodding the exchange to ditch the way it matched buyers and sellers of stocks through human floor traders for years and move to an automated, computerized marketplace. Indeed, once Grasso was out, the firm brazenly engineered the sale of its own electronic stock exchange to the NYSE in one of the most conflicted deals I have ever seen in all my years covering Wall Street. During this time Niederauer emerged as one of the loudest though not necessarily the most articulate advocates of computers over floor traders, which makes his concern about the loss of jobs if the Nasdaq bid is successful even more suspect. Niederauer is infamous for saying that he didn’t want “five guys named Vinny” trading stocks at the NYSE as a way to profess his love of electronic trading, even if it offended every Italian-American trader on Wall Street. That dopey — some would say xenophobic statement — didn’t appear to slow down Niederauer’s career trajectory. Under Grasso’s replacement, fellow Goldman alumn John Thain, Niederauer became the NYSE’s president. In late 2007 when Thain went on to run Merrill Lynch leading the firm while it crashed and burned during the 2008 financial collapse, Niederauer got his shot at running the Big Board, where he promptly apologized for the Vinny remark, and continued the NYSE’s move into computerized market making of stocks. Under Niederauer, the NYSE didn’t implode ala Merrill, but its performance has been nothing to brag about. During the Niederauer years, floor traders continued their exodus, but that doesn’t mean the exchange has become a more efficient marketplace. Indeed there has been at least one “flash crash” under his watch , where prices of NYSE listed stocks declined precipitously because of technical glitches. Meanwhile, NYSE shares, trading under the symbol NYX, have nose-dived more than 50% since he took over. Some of that collapse, of course, can be attributed to the slow down in trading following the 2008 financial crisis. But even as the overall markets have mounted a recover, the NYSE hasn’t. By any measure, the fabled “Big Board,” once the very symbol of global finance, isn’t so big anymore. The NYSE is no longer the primary to match the buyers and sellers of stocks, as it had been for most of its long history. Indeed, many of the firms that once flocked to have their shares “listed” and traded on the NYSE’s “Big Board,” are choosing other venues. The NYSE’s weakened competitive position left the Big Board no other choice but to find in Wall Street parlance “a strategic partner,” which in plain English means it needed to sell itself. Of course, that’s not something Niederauer would admit to; he loves to describe his tie up with Deutsche Börse a “merger.” But the numbers tell a different story: For every share of NYSE stock, his shareholders are getting .47 shares in the new company, while Deutsche Börse shareholders are getting a one-for-one exchange. All of which wouldn’t be so bad until you get into the nitty gritty of the NYSE-DB deal. Niederauer remains as CEO of the newly combined company, which when you crunch the numbers, values the NYSE at $35 a share, $3 less than the consensus of where analysts say the stock is worth. Why would you sell a brand like the NYSE for less than what analysts say its worth? Niederauer would tell you its for the good of the franchise — he has hooked up with a partner that wants to preserve the NYSE franchise while building a bigger brand that will benefit shareholders in the long run. Others might say he’s doing it save his job and remain as CEO at the expense of shareholders. The people who make the latter point include Nasdaq chief Bob Griefeld who has recently teamed up the Jeffrey Sprecher at the Intercontinental Exchange to make a rival bid for the NYSE valued at around $42 a share — a 20 percent premium to the Deutsche Börse bid. They make a compelling argument. It took Niederauer and his board just about a week to summarily reject the Nasdaq/ICE bid. They did so without even having the Greifeld and Spechler make their case in front of the board, or at least hear from top shareholders about what offer might be better. Instead, Niederauer simply brushed aside a a higher offer on the grounds that a combined Nasdaq-NYSE poses massive antitrust issues by merging two US stock markets (funny, Niederauer came to this conclusion even before regulators have had their say) and that the new company wouldn’t be able to “deliver the synergies that the other proposal suggests without a substantial amount of job loss,” according to an interview he gave to the Fox Business Network . By the way, since when is it the job of a CEO to figure job loss into an equation that supposed to focus myopically on what is best for his shareholders? I’m sure there are legitimate reasons to be wary of the Nasdaq/ICE bid. They would be breaking off chunks of the NYSE, with the Nasdaq taking the stock listing business, and the ICE taking the derivatives business. If the Nasdaq bid is successful, the new company would be more leveraged, thus Greifeld would have to slash expenses to make the numbers work, something he’s good at, but its still a risk for buy-and-hold shareholders. The problem is you can’t really trust Niederauer to be making the final call because he has too much to lose, and so do shareholders if they listen to him.

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Mongolian Prime Minister And London Stock Exchange Group (LON:LSE) CEO Seal Partnership To Develop Mongolian Stock Exchange

April 7, 2011

Mongolian Prime Minister And London Stock Exchange Group (LON:LSE) CEO Seal Partnership To Develop Mongolian Stock Exchange

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D’Aguilar Gold Limited (ASX:DGR) Announce Navaho Gold Official Listing On Australia Stock Exchange

April 7, 2011

D’Aguilar Gold Limited (ASX:DGR) Announce Navaho Gold Official Listing On Australia Stock Exchange

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Video: Brookings’s Elliott Says TARP Was `Bargain’ for U.S.

March 30, 2011

March 30 (Bloomberg) — Douglas Elliott, economic studies fellow at the Brookings Institution, and Lynn Turner, a former U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission chief accountant, discuss the Troubled Asset Relief Program and the cost of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. They talk with Matt Miller and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Utah Recognizes Gold Coins As Legal Tender

March 30, 2011

The Beehive State has a new measure on the books that eliminates state taxes on the exchange of gold and silver coins and directs the legislature to study an “alternative form of legal tender.” The law, signed by Gov. Gary Herbert last week, also recognizes gold and silver coins issued by the federal government as legal tender in the state.

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SEC Questions Google’s Tax Bill

March 21, 2011

Google Inc. (GOOG) received questions from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in December about earnings in other countries that may have reduced the company’s tax bill, according to regulatory filings released today. SEC officials asked Google for “disclosures to explain in greater detail the impact on your effective income tax rates and obligations of having proportionally higher earnings in countries where you have lower statutory tax rates,” according to a Dec. 2 letter.

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SEC After Freddie, Fannie Mae Executives

March 18, 2011

The Securities and Exchange Commission is moving toward charging former and current Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac executives with violations related to the financial crisis, setting up a clash with the housing regulator that oversees the companies, according to sources familiar with the matter.

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USDJPY: US Dollar Japanese Yen Exchange Rate Forecast

March 9, 2011

USDJPY: US Dollar Japanese Yen Exchange Rate Forecast

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Beacon To Sell Market Square Office Complex in DC for $615M

March 1, 2011

Beacon Capital Partners LLC agreed to sell nearly 700,000 square feet of Class A commercial office space at 701 and 801 Pennsylvania Ave. in Washington, DC, to Wells Real Estate Investment Trust II Inc. for approximately $615 million, according to a recent U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing. The deal is set to close by Thursday, March 10. Wells REIT II, an affiliate of Norcross, GA-based Wells Real Estate Funds, will use a $500 million…

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Freddie Mac Loses COO

February 11, 2011

Bruce Witherell has left as coo of Freddie Mac according to a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission reports The Wall Street Journal

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Odyssey Petroleum Corp.: Corporate Update

February 10, 2011

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA–(Marketwire – Feb. 10, 2011) – Odyssey Petroleum Corp. (TSX VENTURE:ODE)(FRANKFURT:YQN) has made a final application to the TSX Venture Exchange and is waiting for its acceptance for reinstatement to trading. Upon confirmation from the Exchange that ODE may resume trading, as announced in ODE’s Press Release dated January 21, 2011 the Company intends to continue preparation of required documentation to consolidate its share capital on a 20:1 basis, and to change its name to Petrichor Energy Inc., subject to receipt of regulatory acceptance. A further News Release will be disseminated once regulatory approval has been received and an Effective Date has been set.

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LSE buy’s TMX owner of Toronto Stock Exchange

February 9, 2011

LSE buy’s TMX owner of Toronto Stock Exchange

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Hackers Reportedly Penetrated Nasdaq Computer Network Multiple Times

February 5, 2011

WASHINGTON — A federal government official tells The Associated Press that investigators are trying to identify computer hackers who have repeatedly broken into the network of the company that runs the Nasdaq Stock Market. The official says that the hackers haven’t compromised the exchange’s trading platform and that investigators are looking into a range of possible motives for the cyberattacks – from financial gain to a national security threat. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the inquiry by the FBI and Secret Service is continuing. The official says the penetrations occurred over the course of more than a year. The Wall Street Journal first reported on the hacking. THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below. The computer network that runs the Nasdaq Stock Market has been penetrated by hackers multiple times during the past year, according to a newspaper report. The Wall Street Journal reported on its website late Friday that federal investigators are trying to identify the perpetrators and their motive. People familiar with the investigation say the exchange’s trading platform, the system which executes trades, was not compromised, according to the report. A person involved in the Nasdaq investigation told the newspaper that so far the perpetrators “appear to have just been looking around.” Nasdaq officials declined to comment. A telephone message left with the FBI’s office in New York was not immediately returned. Possible motives include financial gain, theft of trade secrets or a national security threat designed to damage the exchange, the newspaper said. The Secret Service initiated the probe involving New York-based Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. last year. White House officials also have been informed. Investigators have not yet been able to track the cyber break-ins to any specific individual or country, but people with knowledge of the case told the newspaper some evidence points to Russia. However, they point out that hackers could be just using Russia as a conduit. In 1999, a group of hackers calling itself “United Loan Gunmen” infiltrated the computer that runs the websites for Nasdaq and the American Stock Exchange. The hackers left a taunting message and also claimed to have briefly created for itself an e-mail account on Nasdaq’s computer system, suggesting a broader breach in security. But at the time, Nasdaq officials said there was no evidence they manipulated financial data.

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Former Epocrates CEO Kirk Loevner Named CEO of Resilient Network Systems

February 3, 2011

Resilient’s Trust Network Addresses Privacy and Security With a User-Centric Approach to Healthcare Information Exchange

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Video: Jacob Says LinkedIn May Be Valued at $2 Billion or More

January 28, 2011

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — Ryan Jacob, chairman and fund manager at Jacob Asset Management, discusses the outlook for LinkedIn Corp.’s planned initial public offering. The largest professional-networking site plans an IPO after turning a profit in the first nine months of last year and more than tripling revenue between 2007 and 2009, it said in a filing yesterday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Jacob talks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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The Bank of Tokyo Extends Lease at Harborside Financial Center

January 27, 2011

The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, Ltd. (BTMU), a subsidiary of Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, has signed a 10-year, 137,076-square-foot lease extension at Harborside Financial Center Plaza 3. The lease, set to expire in 2019, has been extended through 2029. Plaza 3, a 10-story, 725,600-square-foot, class A office building, is located at 34 Exchange Place in Jersey City, NJ at the Harborside Financial Center, a mixed-use, waterfront business park…

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London Stock Exchange Group (LON:LSE) Signs Strategic Partnership With Mongolian Stock Exchange

January 18, 2011

London Stock Exchange Group (LON:LSE) Signs Strategic Partnership With Mongolian Stock Exchange

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London Stock Exchange Group (LON:LSE) Signs Strategic Partnership With Mongolian Stock Exchange

January 18, 2011

London Stock Exchange Group (LON:LSE) Signs Strategic Partnership With Mongolian Stock Exchange

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Video: Terry Keeley Says Pay-for-Play Bribes Are Widespread

January 14, 2011

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — Terry Keeley, senior managing principal of Sovereign Trends LLC, discusses the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s probe into possible bribes by financial firms to sovereign wealth funds. The SEC is investigating whether banks, hedge funds and private equity firms made improper payments to win state-owned money, according to two people with direct knowledge of the matter. Keeley speaks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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eBay User Turns Tables On Scammer With Great Trick, Serves Up Justice

December 16, 2010

Gizmodo flags this excellent and hilarious post on Reddit in which user BadgerMatt tells how he turned the tables on a woman who bought sports tickets from him on eBay for $600 and then refused to pay, claiming that she “overbid and my husband won’t let me buy these.” BadgerMatt was then unable to sell the tickets to people who had made lower bids, so he used a technique called the ” glim-dropper ” to trick the woman into paying what she owed. I created a new eBay account, “Payback” we’ll call it, and sent her a message: “Hi there, I noticed you won an auction for 4 [sporting event] tickets. I meant to bid on these but couldn’t get to a computer. I wanted to take my son and dad and would be willing to give you $1,000 for the tickets. I imagine that you’ve already made plans to attend, but I figured it was worth a shot.” At 11:30pm she responded to Payback: “I’ll do it for $1,100, no less. I can meet you at the game if you agree. I need your phone number.” At 11:35pm, Payback wrote: “Deal. Here is my number…” (Thanks Google Voice for the throwaway number). She called a few minutes later and made Payback “promise” to go through with the deal. She emphasized that she’d be out a lot of money if Payback backed out. Payback swore he would never do such a thing. At 11:45pm, the woman emailed me: “Fine. I’ll buy them. But you have to drop them off at my house tonight. I’ll have the cash ready.” So at fucking midnight I drove to her house across town and met her on the road in front of her apartment building. She was a nasty and rude individual. Things didn’t get any better when I told her I wanted an extra $20 for the trouble of driving there at midnight (yeah, pushing my luck, I know). It became very awkward and she literally threw 31 $20 bills at me. I counted them before handing over the tickets. I said, “thanks for the great transaction” as she flipped me off while walking away. At 10:00am she called Payback to make sure they were still on for the exchange. Payback said that he could no longer go to the game and wouldn’t be able to do the exchange. She blew her fucking top and I swear to god started speaking in tongues. Payback said, “Ma’am, this is eBay, not a car dealership” and hung up. I got a rabid email 10 minutes later telling me that I was going to hell and that she’s reported me to the local police, FBI, and… the fire department. WTF? She knew she’d been had and sent him an unhinged and profanity-laden email threatening him. He reprints the email in his Reddit post. It is well-worth reading. BadgerMatt wonders if he did the right thing. We think justice was served. What do you think?

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Australian Market Report of December 9, 2010: Indochine Mining Limited (ASX:IDC) Lists On Australian Stock Exchange

December 8, 2010

Australian Market Report of December 9, 2010: Indochine Mining Limited (ASX:IDC) Lists On Australian Stock Exchange

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Facebook Derivatives? As Shares Soar, Investors Cash In

November 24, 2010

Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) — Facebook Inc.’s surging valuation is spurring shareholders to slice and dice their stock, giving investors everywhere from Silicon Valley to Wall Street a chance to bet on the company. EB Exchange Funds LLC, based in San Francisco, as well as New York firms Felix Investments LLC and GreenCrest Capital LLC, have opened Facebook funds for investors looking to get a piece of the social-networking company and its half-billion users.

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Video: Thomas Hubbard Says U.S. Right to Send Aircraft Carrier

November 24, 2010

Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) — Thomas Hubbard, a former U.S. ambassador to South Korea, talks about the U.S. and Chinese reaction to the exchange of artillery fire between North Korea and South Korea. Hubbard speaks with Erik Schatzker and Lizzie O’Leary on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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SECs ABS Proposals May Violate Law Group Says

November 21, 2010

A group of 14 market associations warned the US Securities and Exchange Commission that proposals to apply assetbacked securities regulations to municipal bonds could violate securities laws reports Bond Buyer

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Restrictions In Communication Could Hurt US CMBS

November 21, 2010

A rule recently introduced by the US Securities and Exchange Commission that restrict communication between special servicers of US commercial mortgagebacked securities and credit rating agencies could have the unintended consequence of creating unnecessary rating volatility warns Fitch Ratings

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eHealth Participates in Award to Power ‘Florida Health Choices’ Online Marketplace, Announces Launch of eHealth Government Systems

November 16, 2010

Ceridian Exchange Systems LLC and eHealth, Inc. Partner to Help State Establish Small Business Health Insurance Marketplace; Sam Gibbs Named President of New eHealth Business Unit

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Video: SEC’s Schapiro Says Global Effort Needed for Regulation: Video

November 8, 2010

Nov. 8 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Securities and Exchange Commissioner Mary Schapiro talks with Bloomberg’s Lisa Murphy about financial market regulation and global coordination on new rules. Schapiro speaks from the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association conference in New York. (Source: Bloomberg)

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SEC Investigating Deal Between JPMorgan And Hedge Fund Magnetar

November 1, 2010

The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating whether JPMorgan Chase allowed a hedge fund to improperly select assets for a $1.1 billion deal backed by subprime mortgages, according to people familiar with the probe.

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Video: Pitt Sees `Definite Impact’ From SEC Pay Rule on Firms: Video

October 19, 2010

Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) — Harvey Pitt, chief executive officer of Kalorama Partners LLC and former chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, talks with Bloomberg’s Mark Crumpton about the implications of a proposed SEC rule that would allow company shareholders to vote on executive salaries and bonuses. The shareholder votes would be non-binding, meaning investors’ wishes could be ignored by a company’s board of directors, the agency said in a statement. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Mozilo to Settle SEC Fraud Claims for $67.5 Million: Video

October 15, 2010

Oct. 15 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Edvard Pettersson talks with Mark Crumpton and Julie Hyman about former Countrywide Financial Corp. Chief Executive Officer Angelo Mozilo’s agreement to pay $67.5 million to settle U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission allegations that he misled investors. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Tecce Says Mozilo Likely to Face Suits After Settlement: Video

October 15, 2010

Oct. 15 (Bloomberg) — Fred Tecce, a lawyer at McShea Tecce and a former U.S. attorney, talks with Bloomberg’s Julie Hyman and Mark Crumpton about former Countrywide Financial Corp. Chief Executive Officer Angelo Mozilo’s agreement to pay $67.5 million to settle U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission allegations that he misled investors. (Source: Bloomberg)

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SEC Enforcers See More Witness Coop Deals

October 6, 2010

The Securities and Exchange Commission has netted more than a dozen cooperation deals with witnesses since it launched an initiative to boost the help it gets from individuals in enforcement cases

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