Archive for the ‘Business’ Category

BizSeer.IST

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

Access seems to have been lost. Permanent or temporary?

BizSeer (formerly Smealsearch) is a search engine covering academic publications on all aspects of Business. The search engine crawls websites of universities, commercial organizations, research institutes and government departments to retrieve academic articles, working papers, white papers, consulting reports, magazine articles, and published statistics and facts. For certain documents, the database only stores the hyperlinks to those documents.

Fed in Print

Friday, December 7th, 2007

The Federal Reserve System (also known as the Fed) is the central bank of the United States. The Fed’s primary responsibilities include: conducting the nation’s monetary policy by influencing the money and credit conditions in the economy; supervising and regulating banking institutions; maintaining the stability of the financial system and containing systemic risk that may arise in financial markets; and providing certain financial services to the U.S. government, to the public, to financial institutions, and to foreign offcial institutions. The Fed is composed of the Board of Governors and twelve regional Reserve banks (Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Kansas City, Minneapolis, New York, Philadelphia, Richmond, San Francisco, and St. Louis). Articles in Fed in Print cover all aspects of the economy.

Contains citations of articles appearing in the economic literature published by each regional bank. Many of the publications are available in full-text. Coverage begins 1985.

ALFRED®: ArchivaL Federal Reserve Economic Data

Friday, December 7th, 2007

Using ALFRED® you can retrieve vintage versions of data that were available on specific dates in history. In general, economic data for past observation periods are revised as more accurate estimates become available. As a result, previous vintages of data can be superseded and may no longer be available from various data sources. Vintage data allows academics to reproduce others’ research, build more accurate forecasting models, and analyze economic policy decisions using the data available at the time. The earliest vintage available is 1927-01-26. Over time, we plan to increase the number of series and vintages available.

EDGAR: SEC Filings & Forms

Sunday, November 11th, 2007

EDGAR, the Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval system, performs automated collection, validation, indexing, acceptance, and forwarding of submissions by companies and others who are required by law to file forms with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Its primary purpose is to increase the efficiency and fairness of the securities market for the benefit of investors, corporations, and the economy by accelerating the receipt, acceptance, dissemination, and analysis of time-sensitive corporate information filed with the agency.

Not all documents filed with the Commission by public companies will be available on EDGAR. Companies were phased in to EDGAR filing over a three-year period, ending May 6, 1996. As of that date, all public domestic companies were required to make their filings on EDGAR, except for filings made in paper because of a hardship exemption. Third-party filings with respect to these companies, such as tender offers and Schedules 13D, are also filed on EDGAR.

However, some documents are not yet permitted to be filed electronically, and consequently will not be available on EDGAR. Other documents may be filed on EDGAR voluntarily, and consequently may or may not be available on EDGAR.

SEDAR (System for Electronic Document Analysis and Retrieval)

Tuesday, October 16th, 2007

SEDAR (System for Electronic Document Analysis and Retrieval), published by the Canadian Depository for Securities (CDS), contains annual reports and other publications from major Canadian corporations since 1997. For earlier materials, see the Canadian Corporate Reports Project.

Canadian Corporate Reports Project

Tuesday, October 16th, 2007

Canadian Corporate Reports Project, part of the McGill Digital Archive, contains historical annual reports from approximately 2,000 Canadian corporations in all business sectors, beginning a far back as the nineteenth century. The project is designed to dovetail with the SEDAR electronic collection, which includes reports from 1997 or later. Thus, the Digital Archive Project includes only pre-1997 reports. ( At this time, only a selection of reports from various companies is available: McGill hopes to be able to provide digital access to the entire collection in the future. )