Who Owns a Drawing That May Be Nazi Loot? A Judge Will Decide.
A drawing Egon Schiele made of his wife is the focus of a dispute among a Lehman foundation and heirs of two Jewish art collectors.
By Colin Moynihan and Tom Mashberg
A drawing Egon Schiele made of his wife is the focus of a dispute among a Lehman foundation and heirs of two Jewish art collectors.
By Colin Moynihan and Tom Mashberg
In “The Money Kings,” Daniel Schulman tells the story of the Jewish immigrants who came to the United States and helped build America’s modern economic system.
By Jacob Goldstein
Investors are still spooked after UBS bought its Swiss peer, with confidence in the banking sector in short supply.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Ravi Mattu, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Lauren Hirsch and Ephrat Livni
The legal scholar Katharina Pistor examines the hidden legal layer propping up our modern economic system.
By ‘The Ezra Klein Show’
His early careers as an art historian and Wall Street financier informed his financial thrillers, which often savaged the rich and powerful.
By Katharine Q. Seelye
A bustling market for souvenirs of Lehman Brothers, Enron, and other casualties of the system.
By Sophie Haigney
Examining the Manhattan housing market’s recovery from past economic traumas for clues about how long it may take this time.
By Michael Kolomatsky
The administration and Congress must act — but wisely. The place to start is the overwhelmed health care system.
By Reed Hundt
Big economic changes come when popular narratives mutate and spread, infecting the decisions of millions of people, the economist Robert J. Shiller says.
By Robert J. Shiller
The play, which has chronicled the Lehman Brothers’ rise and devastating collapse through several sold-out runs, will open at the Nederlander Theater in March.
By Nancy Coleman
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