Heidi N. Moore is the New York bureau chief and Wall Street correspondent for Marketplace, where she reports and writes about the culture of banks, companies, financing and markets.

Moore started at Marketplace in January 2011. She enjoys Marketplace's smart, snappy approach and is keenly focused on interpreting and explaining Wall Street so that it's accessible to everyone.

Prior to joining Marketplace, Moore was a reporter for the Wall Street Journal, where she was the lead writer for the paper’s award-winning Deal Journal online and daily newspaper column during the height (and depths) of the world financial crisis. In addition, she wrote an analysis of banks and mergers and broke news of SEC investigations, big acquisitions, and Barclays Capital buying most of Lehman Brothers out of bankruptcy.  Before that, she was U.S. Bureau Chief for London-based, Dow Jones-owned weekly newspaper and daily website, Financial News. For six years, she was a senior writer covering Wall Street banks and power brokers for The Deal magazine.

Moore’s articles on Wall Street banks and finance have been published in The New York Times, Washington Post, New York Magazine, Financial Times and Slate.  

Moore is a graduate of Columbia University and a native New Yorker. In her free time, Moore enjoys running and traveling.

Features By Heidi N. Moore

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Facebook: Part of the insider's financial club?

What did the Morgan Stanley know about Facebook, when did it know, and who did it tell? Shareholders prepare to sue the bank and Facebook over how the public offering of stock was handled.
Posted In: Facebook, IPO, lawsuit
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Checkered IPO doesn't define Facebook

Facebook, the company, doesn’t depend on Facebook, the IPO. Its stock debut is embarrassing, but it doesn’t affect Facebook’s business prospects.
Posted In: Facebook
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Facebook stock price falls on day two of trading

The brand new stock in Facebook is down 11 percent right now to $33.11. If day one of trading was seen as a disappointment, day two is so far not winning many new friends at the social networking company.
Posted In: Facebook, IPO
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The initial launch of the Facebook IPO

After opening later than expected, the first few hours of the Facebook IPO are suggesting that the company might have misjudged the value of its shares.
Posted In: Facebook, IPO, Mark Zuckerberg, shares
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What Did JP Morgan Get Itself Into?

As more details emerge about JP Morgan's money-losing "London Whale" trade, the goalposts are moving fast and it's harder than ever to explain what's going on.
Posted In: London Whale, JP Morgan, Jamie Dimon, losses
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High schoolers to the rescue -- of Europe

Each year, high school freshmen and sophomores take part in the Euro Challenge, a competition to solve the eurozone's economic woes.
Posted In: Europe debt crisis
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As Facebook gets pricier, some pros skip IPO

Facebook raised its target share price for its IPO amid strong demand. But some professional investors see warning signs and have decided to skip.
Posted In: Facebook, IPO
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JPMorgan's loss: More than a blip in the news cycle

New York bureau chief Heidi Moore discusses why JPMorgan's loss is a warning that suggests risky practices are taking place at other Wall Street banks.
Posted In: JPMorgan, Wall Street
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What to expect from JPMorgan's shareholder meeting tomorrow

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon faces shareholders tomorrow after the announcement of a $2 billion loss. He'll most likely get to keep his 2011 pay package, but expect changes in leadership elsewhere in the company.
Posted In: JPMorgan, Jamie Dimon
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Hubris, Thy Name is Dimon

The well-regarded JP Morgan Chase CEO has been talking big talk about how well the bank managed its risk. But this week, we saw he didn't walk the walk.

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