Posted inArticle

NOT-AS-BAD JOBS NUMBERS.

I wouldn’t call the new jobs numbers good economic news, per se. They’re more like not-as-bad economic news. Recently, we’ve average 650,000 jobs losses a month. April saw a “mere” 539,000 lost jobs. And a lot of the jobs created were on the federal-side of the ledge. The private sector lost 611,000 jobs in April. […]

Posted inArticle

CNBC’S STRANGE RELATIONSHIP TO CREDIBILITY.

Maureen — sorry, Mo — Tkacik’s feature-length takedown of CNBC is a really elegant entry into the genre. The lede, in particular, is gorgeous and cruel. Read it. But I’m a bit less convinced by her conclusion: Isolated moments of introspection don’t really show that the network is “reevaluating what it thinks is good for […]

Posted inArticle

DEAN BAKER IS NOT IMPRESSED WITH THE STRESS TESTS.

Here’s why: Unemployment — in their negative scenario, the stress tests assumed a year-round average unemployment rate of 8.9 percent for the 2009 and 10.3 percent for 2010. The economy is on track to have a much higher unemployment rate, as it is likely to hit 9.0 percent in April. My best guess for a […]

Posted inArticle

TESTING THE STRESS TESTS.

For more stress test commentary, check out this roundtable the New York Times held with an array of financial system experts, including Yves Smith, Simon Johnson, and William Black. The assessments range from furiously negative to grimly unconvinced. It’s, err, stressful* reading. *Sorry, sorry…

Posted inArticle

DAY OF STRESS.

The results of the Supervisory Capital Assessment Program — sorry, the stress tests — are out. You can download the full release here. I’ve actually gotten the feeling in recent days that there’s a bit of confusion over what the stress tests actually represent. In short, the stress test was an examination of how the […]

Posted inArticle

THE SEC (YEAH YOU KNOW ME!).

It’s sort of received wisdom that the Securities and Exchange Commission is irredeemably captured by the financial industry and totally incapable of conducting its daily affairs. But what you didn’t know was how comically incompetent it was. Moe Tkacik — with an assist from a GAO report — explains.

Posted inArticle

IN DEFENSE OF MALCOLM GLADWELL.

Sorry for the slow blogging today. Meetings are the enemy of the blog. But I did want to say a word on Malcolm Gladwell, who’s coming in for a lot of semi-deserved flack for his article on underdogs. In the piece, Gladwell offers up a puff job on Silicon Valley parent who coached a team […]

Gift this article