The Rothschild dynasty survived wars, financial crises and persecution. The Epstein scandal threatens to deepen a divide among two rival Rothschild banks. https://t.co/qcELm5UrS0 via @WSJ
Jho Low, the alleged mastermind of one of the greatest financial frauds in history, is asking President Trump for a pardon https://t.co/T7jSZU3nTP via @WSJ
"Back leverage" -- more private credit lingo for banks with back-door exposure to borrowers. In this case HSBC had a $400M+ loan to an Atlas SPV lending to collapsed mortgage broker MFS https://t.co/hAx9gxe016 via @WSJ
UBS refused to hand over privileged documents in a probe into Credit Suisse’s Nazi-linked accounts, citing risk of new financial claims https://t.co/BYeT9P1Gpm
Ghost towns and wasted caviar: Saudi Arabia’s futuristic agenda was already in trouble. War in Iran plunged it deeper into jeopardy. https://t.co/UchKuMF4fj via @WSJ
Police searched the offices of Swiss bank Edmond de Rothschild as part of an investigation into a former French diplomat who used to work at the bank and was an associate of Jeffrey Epstein https://t.co/oNybIA9gLJ via @WSJ
Huel grabs $1.2 billion valuation with meal-replacing protein shakes. Users say they're like muffin batter, or the chocolate milk at the bottom of a cereal bowl. Enjoy! https://t.co/SCrkhiMwJA via @WSJ
“I literally think all the marks are wrong. Is that what you’re asking me? I think private-equity marks are wrong” —
Apollo Global Management’s John Zito, co-president of the firm’s asset-management arm
https://t.co/BeAYOkNw7t
Some of Wall Street’s most sophisticated players fueled the rise of London lender Market Financial Solutions. There were warning signs. https://t.co/0IpqSuKfQe via @WSJ
Sarah Ferguson visited Jeffrey Epstein on work-release in April 2009 while he served his sentence in Florida. (She asked to pop by for a quick cup of tea on a layover, he emailed the address) https://t.co/RQzwiHUZNA via @WSJ
Self-defense shootings leave a deadly toll on innocent bystanders, “turning public places into crossfire zones.” Grieving families learn how laws protect people who miss their targets. https://t.co/avCFtvYqSJ via @WSJ
Brendan Nelson brings decades of experience to his new role as HSBC chairman, including as a top auditor to banks that later ran into trouble during the financial crisis https://t.co/pqjexb3uNu via @WSJ