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Google Reduces Evil Quotient

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Gus3/22/2010 10:08:24 pm PDT

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FRONTLINE: inside the meltdown

As the housing bubble burst and trillions of dollars’ worth of toxic mortgages began to go bad in 2007, fear spread through the massive firms that form the heart of Wall Street. By the spring of 2008, burdened by billions of dollars of bad mortgages, the investment bank Bear Stearns was the subject of rumors that it would soon fail.

“Rumors are such that they can just plain put you out of business,” Bear Stearns’ former CEO Alan “Ace” Greenberg tells FRONTLINE.

The company’s stock had dropped from $171 to $57 a share, and it was hours from declaring bankruptcy. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke acted. “It was clear that this had to be contained. There was no doubt in his mind,” says Bernanke’s colleague, economist Mark Gertler.

Bernanke, a former economics professor from Princeton, specialized in studying the Great Depression. “He more than anybody else appreciated what would happen if it got out of control,” Gertler explains…

Frontline Inside The Meltdown Part 1 of 6
Frontline Inside The Meltdown Part 2 of 6
Frontline Inside The Meltdown Part 3 of 6
Frontline Inside The Meltdown Part 4 of 6
Frontline Inside The Meltdown Part 5 of 6
Frontline Inside The Meltdown Part 6 of 6