ABI Blog Exchange
If you want to fly in first, prove you're a class act, travel experts say.
Credit unions used to require a job tie for membership. Now, you can join without it.
A mortgage refinance is trickier than it was a few years ago. Here are five ways to mess up.
Even if you've had no income for 36 months, your paid-off car is off limits to collection agencies.
When it comes to mortgage rates, listen to your lender and don't wait to lock.
Introduction
Article I, Section 8, of the US Constitution authorizes Congress to enact “uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies.” Under this grant of authority, Congress created the “Bankruptcy Code” in 1978.
The most important ingredient in any major government-initiated, tenant-to-homeownership program is the commitment of the tenant/homeowner, not the paternalism of the government.
By: Robert B. Stein and Manasi Parekh
The Texan presidential hopeful must learn to put policy over hyperbole when he speaks about Ben Bernanke or the Federal Reserve.
UPDATE: While Picard may have lost the battle in the District Court’s HSBC ruling, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals handed him a significant victory yesterday as it affirmed the bankruptcy court’s approval of the use of Picard’s “net equi
Recent court rulings may have significant impact on how bankruptcy courts handle escrow debts in some
The Madoff investment scandal was arguably the most widespread and financially devastating Ponzi scheme on record, with a fraud on customers estimated at $64 billion. Shortly after the scheme’s discovery in 2008, the Securities Investor Prot
New York hedge-fund manager Centerbridge Credit Advisors LLC is objecting to Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s liquidation plan, saying among other things that some of its claims are being treated less favorably than they should be.
You’re filing a bankruptcy case. You’re suing someone. You don’t have anything yet. Your lawyers says she’s not sure your suit is worth anything. So you don’t have to schedule it on your bankruptcy papers. Right?&nbs