Links 6/18/2010

- Gold hit a fresh record high yesterday just as the euro and stocks also gained, while the VIX fell to a six-week low. “Maybe the strange cross-currents were a sign that some market players were wrapping up their week a day early and heading for the beach,” Tom Petruno says. “In fact, Friday might be a good day to take off.” Spot on – Dow finishes up 16 in a sleepy session.

- Not much action out of Palm since word of acquisition by H-P (HPQ), but expect that to change in the near future, Digital Daily blogger John Paczkowski says. At a developer event yesterday, PALM developer liaison Josh Marinacci offered some of the company’s upcoming plans. “We are working on future devices. And a new version of the OS. So I think you’re going to find the next year very exciting.”

- It appears the White House may be changing its mind on reining in CEO pay, according to The Huffington Post. But the change doesn’t seem to be garnering the attention it deserves. “Well, the BP disaster, in particular the intense press coverage of this week, appears to have provided the Administration with some very useful air cover, by diverting public attention from the final rounds in the battle to reform Wall Street,” Yves Smith says.

- Investor sentiment readings this week were mixed. “Although far from extreme bearishness, this level of optimism is consistent with an oversold market, but does not necessarily signify that all is clear,” Pragmatic Capitalism notes. “The majority of the reliable short-term buy signals have coincided with lower levels of bullishness.”

- Ratings agencies played a prominent role in the financial crisis, but the big three agencies have “escaped much blame, liability and scrutiny for most of the post-crisis period,” FusionIQ CEO Barry Ritholtz writes. But that may be coming to an end.

- Enthusiasm for Apple’s (AAPL) iPad has been obscured by excitement over its new iPhone 4, but DigiTimes says the tablet computer is moving quickly. The Taiwanese technology publication says iPad monthly shipments reached a whopping 1.2M units and could balloon to 2.5M by year’s end.

- Nevada registers the highest monthly state unemployment rate in May, coming in at a staggering 14%, marking the first time in four years Michigan wasn’t awarded the dubious distinction, according to a new Labor Department report (via NYT’s Economix blog). By contrast Michigan’s rate was 13.6%.

- Twitter’s strong growth continues. ComScore reports the microblogging service registered 90.2M unique visitors last month, a 7.6% increase from 83.8M uniques in April. “After a lull in the winter, it’s clear that Twitter is back on track,” TechCrunch says.

- “No one will pay any heed to the now discredited Greenspan who ironically was worshiped for all the things he got wrong and ignored the few times he ever said anything that made any sense,” Mish opines.

- WSJ’s Jim Chairusm writes about why the lost US goal in the Slovenia game today shouldn’t matter.

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