The Big Picture |
- Why the American economy grows faster under Democrats
- Real and Financial Vulnerabilities from Crossborder Banking Linkages
- 10 Wednesday PM Reads
- What’s the worst hurricane anyone in your town remembers?
- HFT: Jumping the Queue
- One Cheer for Fair Isaac
- 10 Wednesday AM Reads
- Firing Managers to Solve an Investment Problem
- Vanguard: Quantifying the impact of chasing fund performance
| Why the American economy grows faster under Democrats Posted: 14 Aug 2014 03:30 AM PDT Another classic correlation versus causation issue: Autoplay video after the jump
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| Real and Financial Vulnerabilities from Crossborder Banking Linkages Posted: 14 Aug 2014 02:30 AM PDT |
| Posted: 13 Aug 2014 02:00 PM PDT My afternoon train reads :
What are you reading?
Monthly deal activity has remained steady the past 12 months |
| What’s the worst hurricane anyone in your town remembers? Posted: 13 Aug 2014 11:30 AM PDT
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| Posted: 13 Aug 2014 09:00 AM PDT click for full image |
| Posted: 13 Aug 2014 07:00 AM PDT Sometimes we don't know exactly how broken things are until after they get fixed. Case in point: Fair Isaac Corp., the company that created the model used to calculate the scores underlying millions of consumer loan and credit decisions. The New York Times described Fair Isaac’s formula as "one of the most widely used and influential credit scores." The information it generates is used in the credit reports generated by Equifax, Experian and TransUnion, the three big companies that gather information on individuals and track their credit ratings. It is hard to understate the influence of FICO, as the company and its namesake scoring system are called. Like all models, FICO has its flaws. Last week, the bad news was we learned how much more deeply flawed this model was than we previously understood. The good news is that Fair Isaac has been cajoled by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, an agency created by the Dodd-Frank Act, into applying more balance and fairness in its metrics. There were two significant changes: Continues here
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| Posted: 13 Aug 2014 06:30 AM PDT My morning train reads (continues here):
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| Firing Managers to Solve an Investment Problem Posted: 13 Aug 2014 04:15 AM PDT This industry is skewed towards the interests of asset managers, not asset owners, Stefan Dunatov, CIO of Coal Pension Trustees Ltd., believes
SoDI: Solving the Investment Problem—Fire the Managers |
| Vanguard: Quantifying the impact of chasing fund performance Posted: 13 Aug 2014 03:00 AM PDT |
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