Posted by Jonathan J. Miller -Monday, January 12, 2009, 10:47 PM
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The New York Times asked me to provide insight and share research and reports I come across (excluding my own) that may help inform readers on the topic of housing. In other words, blog a little for the New York Times.
As a New York Times “online contributor”, I get a byline which is about as cool as it gets, other than getting a lot of blue moons in a box of Lucky Charms.
Here is my latest handywork. I wrote it more than a month ago, but it got hung up in the works.
The Liquidity Crunch Cycle
Suggested bookmark: New York Times Topics: Housing
Posted by Jonathan J. Miller -Thursday, November 20, 2008, 1:56 AM
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The New York Times asked me to provide insight and share research and reports I come across (excluding my own) that may help inform readers on the topic of housing. In other words, blog a little for the New York Times.
As a New York Times “online contributor”, I get a byline which is beyond neat.
Here is my latest handywork:
The Federal Housing Finance Agency: Regulators Awaken!
It was my first semi-snarky piece for them and from the feedback, I wasn’t sure they were going to run it, so I posted a similar story here on Matrix. To their credit they ran it with my byline. Happiness ensued.
Suggested bookmark: New York Times Topics: Housing
Posted by Jonathan J. Miller -Wednesday, November 12, 2008, 3:28 PM
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The New York Times asked me to share research and reports I come across (excluding my own) that may help inform readers on the topic of housing.
Here is my recent handywork as a New York Times “online contributor”:
Subprime Finance: High Prepayments, High Defaults
Think “exit strategy.”
Posted by Jonathan J. Miller -Friday, October 24, 2008, 12:41 AM
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Here’s the remainder of the Q&A column I was invited by the New York Times to participate in, along with Vicki Been of the NYU/Furman Center.
I enjoyed the process and was asked to do more in the future.
Expert Q&A: A Downturn for New York Real Estate?
This is the second session. There were originally supposed to be three, but they asked more questions in each of the two so I suppose they felt they had enough.
And who needs reality television when you’ve got Karl Rove speaking at the Mortgage Bankers Association’s annual convention.
Posted by Jonathan J. Miller -Wednesday, October 22, 2008, 12:41 AM
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Been crunchin’ two new market reports 24/7 (one is a re-design) to be released very soon so my posts have been few and far between. In the meantime, here’s a Q&A column I was invited by the New York Times to participate in, along with Vicki Been of the NYU/Furman Center.
It works like this: NYT announces the Q&A session and then picks out questions they want the experts to answer. It’s really a format I enjoy.
Expert Q&A: A Downturn for New York Real Estate?
This is the first session. There will be two more over the next several days.
Of course, Gossip Girl was also on many people’s minds.
Posted by Jonathan J. Miller -Sunday, October 19, 2008, 10:49 PM
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The New York Times asked me to share research and reports I come across (excluding my own) that may help inform readers on the topic of housing.
As a New York Times “online contributor”, I get a byline which is neat.
Here is my recent handywork:
Suggested bookmark: New York Times Topics: Housing
Posted by Jonathan J. Miller -Sunday, October 5, 2008, 8:31 PM
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The New York Times asked me to share research and reports I come across (excluding my own) that may help inform readers on the topic of Housing.
Best of all, I get a byline link on the site.
Here’s my handywork for the week (link takes you to a brief post):
Bookmark: New York Times Topics: Housing
NY Times Topics: Housing on Matrix
Posted by Jonathan J. Miller -Friday, September 26, 2008, 1:15 AM
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The New York Times asked me to share research and reports I come across (excluding my own) that may help inform readers on the topic of Housing. There are many other topics to choose from. I also recommend “Wall Street“.
Their endeavor is essentially a blog-like repository that contains housing related articles written by New York Times journalists, mixed in with brief posts from myself and a few other contributors. (All that long hand writing in 8th grade using a red ball point pen is finally paying off.)
It was just launched and I like the concept. And best of all, I get a byline link on the site.
Here’s my handywork for the week (links take you to a brief post):
Bookmark: New York Times Topics: Housing