Opinion

Anat Admati

Stanford professor Anat Admati, whose book The Bankers’ New Clothes, which she co-wrote with Martin Hellwig, has become a call to arms for reformers globally, has done just that. Rather than focus on ...
SANTA CLARA, Calif., July 24, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- PDF Solutions, Inc. (Nasdaq: PDFS), a leading provider of comprehensive data solutions for the semiconductor and electronics ecosystems, today ...
A man wearing a mask walks past the US Federal Reserve building in Washington DC on April 29, 2020. Liu Jie/Xinhua/Getty Images Paul Constant is a writer at Civic Ventures, a cofounder of the Seattle ...
(MoneyWatch) Anat Admati can foresee the country's economic ruin -- or its salvation. However the chips fall, she'll be able to say "I told you so." In an important new book due out next month, "The ...
Join the Stigler Center for a conversation on finance, technology and society with Professor Anat Admati exploring the way and reasons that market and policy may fail in these sectors and what we must ...
Admati’s book “The Bankers’ New Clothes,” co-written with Martin Hellwig, has inspired financial decision-makers to rethink their understanding of banking and global economies, Foroohar noted. A 2013 ...
What do Senator Elizabeth Warren, Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen, and Christine Lagarde, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, have in common? For one, all three will appear in ...
This is the third in a series looking back on the Troubled Asset Relief Program (Tarp) – the government intervention that sought to calm the financial crisis and restart the economy in 2008.
A company looking to make an investment needs money, and it can get the money in one of two ways. It can finance the investment with debt by borrowing money from a bank or bond markets, or it can use ...
Last week the largest U.S. banks received a clean bill of health from the Federal Reserve, which pronounced them capable of withstanding the shock from a severe recession. Tell that to Anat Admati. A ...
(MoneyWatch) As the new year began, the mood changed. It felt as though everyone had decided: We've had enough of crisis. It's over. Let's get back to business. Call it crisis fatigue, if you want: ...