Features By Alisa Roth
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How the 30-year mortgage came to be
Marketplace's Alisa Roth looks into the history of the 30-year mortgage.
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More money, better thoughts about life?
The Beatles should've given us a leg up and told us what money can buy: Happiness -- to a certain degree. A study shows that folks who earn around $75,000 think they have a pretty good life, compared to those who earn less.
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Bernanke wants consumers and businesses to spend towards a recovery
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke encouraged more consumers and businesses to spend money in a speech this morning. But with confidence lacking in the public, that idea may be a tough sell.
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The Dow's 'nice, big, pretty number,' 10,000
Ten thousand points seems to be the magic number of choice for many investors when it comes to the Dow Jones Industrial Index. Marketplace's Alisa Roth sees if there's any truth behind that belief.
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Small investors pulling out of U.S. stock funds
Small investors pulled out from U.S. stock market mutual funds in a big way over the last few months. So where is all that money going? Marketplace's Alisa Roth follows the money.
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Companies unloading cash on mergers
Cautious companies have been hoarding cash, but they're now unloading that stash for acquisitions and mergers. Marketplace's Alisa Roth looks into the benefits and pitfalls of these business moves.
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What GM's IPO means
Marketplace's Alisa Roth looks into what GM's IPO means for the company -- from the government's involvement with GM to its future as a company.
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Fannie and Freddie trying to return bad mortgages
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are trying to recoup $150 billion, so they can pay back the government. They're employing something called "buy-backs" to do just that. Marketplace's Alisa Roth explains.
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Commercial paper market rates at record lows
Short-term loans for corporations from the commercial paper market are back and corporations are taking out loans, even if they don't necessarily need them. Marketplace's Alisa Roth explains why.
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Taxes on H-1B visas pay for border bill
President Obama signed a $600 million border security bill that will put more agents and equipment on the job along the Mexican border.
But with the U.S. bank balance deeply in the red, where's that money coming from? According to the White House, from taxes on H-1B visas for skilled workers. Alisa Roth reports.












