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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Who is the Fed's Master?

Everyone's watching today's FOMC rate decision. But at this point, what does a low interest-rate policy accomplish that it hasn't already?
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Microsoft unveils new Surface tablet

There's a new tablet in town. It's called the Surface, and it's Microsoft's answer to the iPad. But will the new product, complete with a keyboard and running Windows, be able to compete in the tablet market?
Posted In: Microsoft, tablet, Surface
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After Greek elections, crisis wanes, but not over

Greece manages to stay in the eurozone for now, but it is clear that European central banks can't handle too many more bailouts for countries like Spain.
Posted In: Greece
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With Greek elections done for now, what's next?

Looking ahead at what's to come for other eurozone countries and what's happening at the G20 summit.
Posted In: Eurozone, Greece, spain, France, Germany, Francois Hollande, G20 summit
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A Normal Person's Guide to the Big Fat Greek Election

Greeks are deciding on their next political leaders today - and, not incidentally, the fate of the eurozone. If Greeks reject austerity, many are predicting a worldwide financial panic. Here's what you need to know.
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Jamie Dimon Welcomes You to the Next Financial Crisis

Jamie Dimon's testimony this week has been sliced and diced in the financial press, and for the most part Dimon got off easy. But his scariest statement - that JP Morgan was planning to make money in a global credit crisis - now seems the most interesting and prescient.
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JPMorgan CEO Dimon goes before Senate

Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Jamie Dimon will be grilled on a huge trading loss by the bank's unit in London.
Posted In: JP Morgan, Jamie Dimon, Senate
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Jamie Dimon apologizes, explains loss before Congress

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon apologized for not doing a better job supervising trades that lost his bank billions. Dimon emphasized that while bank shareholders lost money, their clients and taxpayers did not.
Posted In: bank, JPMorgan, Jamie Dimon
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From the Senate Hearing: JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon

Follow along in real time with today's Senate hearing on JPMorgan's multibillion-dollar bad bet. A collection of photos, Tweets, related reading, and other tantalizing details from the Senate gallery.
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Jamie Dimon's testimony was a wake for Dodd-Frank

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon spoke before the Senate Banking Committee today, trying to explain the $2 billion loss his company made in trading. The committee went fairly easy on the banker.
Posted In: JPMorgan, Jamie Dimon

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