BARRON'S
COVER
Week of
March 24
by
Jacqueline
Doherty
The
financial
sector's
strongest
players
probably
don't
have
further
to sink,
even
with the
ongoing
pressure
of
negative
news.
Here are
several
banks
and
brokerages
ready to
pop up
for air.
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INTERVIEW
AN INTERVIEW WITH CARL WEINBERG: He sees falling oil prices and a long healing process for the U.S. economy. Why the Fed gets an A for effort.
BARRON'S
FEATURE
JPMorgan Chase likely will have to sweeten its bid for Bear Stearns.
BARRON'S
FEATURE
The rebalanced Barron's 400 bulks up on science and tech names.
BARRON'S
FEATURE
Bankrate is having its best quarter yet, despite Wall Street's expectations.
THE
TRADER
Bad news/good news whipsaw the indexes.
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BARRON'S
FEATURE
The 30 CEOs profiled in our fourth annual roundup of the world's best corporate leaders have the skill to navigate these choppy waters.
BARRON'S
FEATURE
A strategist with a talent for calling stock-market lows sees one now.
BARRON'S
FEATURE
Best Buy's beaten-down stock price belies the retailer's bright prospects.
UP
AND
DOWN
WALL
STREET
Old jokes never die, at least on Wall Street. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac redux.
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STOCKS TO
WATCH TODAY
| FREE
TECH TRADER
DAILY
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UP AND DOWN
WALL STREET
DAILY
| FREE
Without
credit being
diverted
into
commodities,
their bubble
bursts.
THE STRIKING
PRICE DAILY
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Relief from
Washington
is adding
liquidity to
the mortgage
market and
generating
bullish
options
activity in
shares of
Fannie and
Freddie.
GETTING
TECHNICAL
| FREE
The Fed
engineered
another save
for the
market this
week, but
the buying
stampede was
not as
convincing
as it
looked.
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