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The Deutsche Bank Building (formerly Bankers Trust Plaza) was a 39-story office building located at 130 Liberty Street in Manhattan, New York City, adjacent to the World Trade Center site. The building opened in 1974 and closed following the September 11 attacks in 2001, due to contamination that spread from the collapse of the South Tower.
In the Deutsche Bank case study, the Report focuses on the bank's top CDO trader, Greg Lippmann. He warned colleagues that the RMBS and CDO securities were "crap" and "pigs" and could make money taking shorts against them. He predicted the securities would lose value and called the financial industry's CDO operation as a "ponzi scheme."
Damaged in the collapse of 1 and 2 World Trade Center 2 [14] Barclay–Vesey Building: Lower Manhattan, New York City 1927 Damaged Damaged in the collapse of 7 World Trade Center 0 [15] Deutsche Bank Building: Lower Manhattan, New York City 1973 Demolished Heavily damaged from debris from the collapse of 2 World Trade Center, was later ...
German hopes of creating a national banking champion able to challenge global competitors were dashed on Thursday when Deutsche Bank and Commerzbank ended merger talks due to the risks of doing a ...
The Deutsche Bank Building, the Verizon Building, and 3 World Financial Center had impact damage from the towers' collapse, [97] as did 90 West Street. [98] One Liberty Plaza survived structurally intact but sustained surface damage including shattered windows. 30 West Broadway was damaged by the collapse of 7 World Trade Center. The Deutsche ...
In the case of New York Community Bancorp, it was largely one office loan and one co-op loan that were responsible for a steep rise in net charge-offs to $185 million from $1 million in the year ...
Deutsche Bank, spying scandal; Deutsche Bank Libor scandal, agreed to a combined US$2.5 billion in fines; Duke Energy [10] El Paso Corp. [10] Fannie Mae, underreporting of profit; Firestone Tire & Rubber Company, part of the General Motors streetcar conspiracy, labor controversies, Firestone and Ford tire controversy
[17] [18] By July 2004, there were plans to build a tower named 5 World Trade Center (5 WTC) on the site of the Deutsche Bank Building, [17] which remained standing but was slated for demolition due to heavy damage. [19] The structure would have been about 57 stories high and contained up to 1,600,000 square feet (150,000 m 2) of floor space.