Nancy Marshall-Genzer is a senior reporter for Marketplace and works from the Washington D.C. bureau.

Marshall-Genzer began working for Marketplace in the spring of 2007, after filing freelance pieces for the program for years prior to that. Covering the daily news from the nation’s capital, Marshall-Genzer has reported many special features.

Marshall-Genzer has a long history in radio. Before joining the Marketplace portfolio, she worked at NPR, where her duties included producing, editing and reporting. Her previous experience also includes stints at WAMU 88.5 public radio in Washington, D.C., Monitor Radio and NBC radio and television, where she served as bureau chief for NBC TV in Tuzla, Bosnia.

In 1999, Marshall-Genzer won an American Medical Writers Association Award for her freelance contribution to the Marketplace series, “Wanted for Questioning: America’s Most Profitable Drug Companies.”

Marshall-Genzer holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Ohio University.

A native of Averill Park, N.Y., she currently lives in Silver Spring, Md., with her family, who recently welcomed twin sons. Describing herself as a nosy person, Marshall-Genzer appreciates that her job fulfills that desire to ask questions and learn something new every day.

Features By Nancy Marshall-Genzer

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How 9/11 changed business travel

Conventional wisdom says 9/11 damaged business travel. But it also forced some changes that made travel cheaper for business fliers, and led to alternatives.
Posted In: Travel
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CFPB director confirmation will be an uphill battle

President Obama nominated Richard Cordray to be the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. But Republicans don't want there to be a director at all.
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GDP growth stalls at 1%, fears of recession grow

U.S. GDP growth was a tiny 1 percent in the second quarter of the year. But is this typical of recession, or recovery?
Posted In: Economy
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Insurance companies will feel the hurt from Hurricane Irene

When Hurricane Irene hits the East Coast this weekend, it will have broad economic impacts. Businesses from insurance companies to movie theaters will feel the sting of the storm.
Posted In: Small Business
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Warren Buffett will invest in Bank of America

Bank of America's stock dropped around 40 percent in recent months. So why is Warren Buffett about to hand them $5 billion?
Posted In: Banks
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Hurricane, earthquake raise insurance concerns

The impending landfall of Hurricane Irene and the historic earthquake yesterday on the East Coast have many homeowners wondering just what their insurance policies cover.
Posted In: Housing
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Banks seek refuge from foreclosure investigations

Banks accursed of using robo-signers to foreclose homes are looking to make a deal that would give them immunity from states conducting investigations.
Posted In: Housing
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Federal Reserve made billions in secret loans

Reports show that during the height of the housing crisis in the U.S., the Federal Reserve made as much as a trillion dollars off secret loans made to banks.
Posted In: The Federal Reserve
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Downgrade could make life expensive for municipalities

The downgrade of the U.S. credit rating will also likely force ratings cuts on bonds issued by cities and states. That could raise municipality borrowing costs.
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Senators meet on mortgage servicers

Right now there are no rules governing mortgage servicers, the people who take a borrower's monthly payments and distribute the money to investors. The Senate Banking Committee debates some new standards today
Posted In: Housing

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