Banco Popular de Puerto Rico
Banco Popular de Puerto Rico is a full-service financial services provider with operations in Puerto Rico, the United States and Virgin Islands. Popular, Inc. is the largest banking institution by both assets and deposits in Puerto Rico, and in the United States Popular, Inc.
-
Breaking News This Morning ...Barclays to Cut Jobs, Too: Following yesterday's announcement by fellow Londoner HSBC that it would fire as many as 30,000 people, Barclays said it intends to shed 3,000 jobs this year above and beyond the 1,400 the British bank eliminated in the first half. Barclays' first-half profit dropped by a third as it set aside money to compensate customers who bought dodgy payment protection insurance. Investment banking revenue declined as well. Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Financial Times
August 2 -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...So, What Now? President Obama signed into law the compromise deal allowing the government to raise the federal debt ceiling, but economic fears persist. The U.S. stock market tanked for an eighth consecutive day, the longest down stretch since that scary period in '08. "Foreign investors and economic analysts see further action as crucial to restoring the United States' financial reputation," the Washington Post reports. "Critics in China and elsewhere warned that the initial debt-reduction package, which would cut about $1 trillion from agency budgets over the next decade, is too modest." ("China and elsewhere" - there's just something about that phrase …) The FT notes prominently that the price of gold, a classic hedge against bad times, hit another record high. And the Journal reports that central banks around the world (South Korea being the latest) are "ramping up their gold buying as they seek to diversify their reserves away from the dollar and other beleaguered currencies." (There's another one: "the dollar and other beleaguered …") Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Financial Times
August 3 -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...European Contagion: The papers report today that the continent's debt crisis is spreading from peripheral countries (Greece, Ireland and Portugal) to Italy and Spain. (Though we'd thought that the investment community had lumped all five together a while ago, given traders' use of the unflattering acronym PIIGS). According to a story in the Times, big banks in those two larger economies — namely Italy's UniCredit and Intesa, and the Spanish banks Santander and BBVA — own so many bonds from their home countries that the banks themselves are being weakened as the securities fall in value. These worries are making it more difficult for the banks to finance their own daily operations. Reflecting the dire situation, the European Central Bank announced this morning that it will hold interest rates steady after two recent rate hikes. The Journal's "Heard on the Street" column observes that central banks around the world are running out of levers they can pull to prevent deflation. Which is especially problematic given the move toward austere fiscal policies in the face of high debt levels. Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Washington Post
August 4 -
Breaking News This Morning ...Fannie Mae Loses $2.9B in 2Q: The government-sponsored enterprise has asked the Treasury for another $5 billion of aid.
August 5 -
We wonder if it's the same individual who talked to CNBC and ABC News, but it's hard to tell since ABC identified their source as "a government official," while CNBC's is merely "someone familiar with the matter." But the information is essentially the same: the federal government is expecting and preparing for a downgrade by Standard & Poor's Corp.
August 5 -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...Downgrade Reaction: Saying the budget deal didn't do enough to fix America's finances, Standard & Poor's Friday dropped the U.S. debt rating to AA-plus from AAA. Perhaps more ominous, the agency said a further downgrade is possible. Included in the reaction, Standard & Poor's and other ratings agencies "have never given us any reason to take their judgments about national solvency seriously," columnist Paul Krugman writes in the Times. Even though S&P made a $2 trillion error in calculations in the press release it sent to the U.S. Treasury for preliminary approval, S&P downgraded U.S. government debt anyway. The Journal said, "The rating cut by S&P on long-term U.S. debt threatened to upend one of the fundamental underpinnings of the financial markets going back decades: The risks and pricing of practically every major investment have been measured against the idea that U.S.-government debt was risk free.'" The Post, meanwhile, reported that Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke had a conference call Sunday night with other economic leaders about how they would respond to the S&P downgrade. Another Journal story dealt with the downgrade's impact on the mortgage market. Still another article says that despite the downgrade, Treasuries will remain the safe haven for investors. Meanwhile "Heard on The Street" said the rating action could be a positive if it spurs "new urgency to tackle deficits and thorny economic issues."
August 8 -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...Dow Down: The lead story in all three papers was the Dow Jones Industrial Average falling 635 points, or 5.55 percent, to 10,810 yesterday, the worst day since December 2008. An address from President Obama, the Journal said, failed to inspire the markets as the Dow lost 20 points during his 11-minute speech. Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Washington Post
August 9 -
William A. Cooper makes a cameo appearance in Ryan Lizza's profile of the GOP presidential hopeful.
August 9 -
Breaking News This Morning ...HSBC Sells U.S. Credit Card Business: Capital One will buy HSBC's credit card business in the U.S. for a premium of $2.6 billion. Analysts expect the deal could raise Capital One's earnings by 10 percent or more. Wall Street Journal, New York Times
August 10 -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...Down, Up, and Down Again: The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 520 points, 4.62 percent, putting it to the lowest level since September 2010 and wiping out Tuesday's gains. The Post predicted "The dramatic reversal signals investors are likely to see more volatile trading in the days and weeks ahead as world markets struggle to digest the full ramifications of the European debt crisis." The Journal said that bank stocks led the way down. The paper added that the Federal Reserve Bank of New York has been ramping up the number of calls it makes to banks to ask about "the volatility in their stock prices." It noted that for the second time this week Bank of America shares fell more than most. Meanwhile, the Times said the stock market fluctuations are giving Americans flashbacks to the 2008 financial crisis. Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Washington Post
August 11




