Links 7/8/2010

Posted by Steven Russolillo on July 08, 2010
Banks, Economy, europe, Internet, Markets, Recession, Stress Tests, Technology, Unemployment, Washington

- Nokia’s (NOK) adding its own twist to the Apple/Gizmodo iPhone 4 controversy earlier this year. Nokia’s getting Russian police involved in asking Eldar Murtazin, editor-in-chief of Moscow-based mobile-review.com, to return the prototype N8, a device he gave an unfavorable review earlier this year.

- “Investors have this week been buying up names that have been hit the hardest in recent months, which is usually the case when we see bounces like this,” Bespoke says.

- Banks and regulators must take “appropriate action” to strengthen banks’ resilience to shocks and safeguard the health of Europe’s financial system, ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet says.

- Whatever happened to all those toxic assets on banks’ balance sheets that garnered so much attention a while back?

- Jobless claims dropping 21,000 to 454,000 represents a “tactical victory for the bulls,” James Picerno writes at The Capital Spectator. “But until and if the trend rolls on it’s only marginally encouraging. The strategic outlook, in other words, is still up for grabs.”

- Silicon Alley Insider says the real reason Google (GOOG) is worried about Facebook is that people buying things are more inclined to trust their friends than strangers or search ads. SAI says that’s the key message in a presentation prepared by Google researcher Paul Adams for company execs who are plotting the company’s next social network initiative, rumored to be called “Google Me.”

- Individual investors are turning more bearish, which contrarians could actually view as a bullish indicator. Only 25% of AAII’s respondents are bullish on stocks, compared to 42% who say they are bears. “I always prefer actual buy and sell driven data — prices, volume, asset allocation, etc. — versus mere surveys,” Big Picture blogger Barry Ritholtz says. “They can be useful, but have huge limitations. Us humans are notorious for saying what we hope, rather than what actually is.”

- Double-dip has dominated the market chatter in recent days. While pundits keep saying the economy won’t fall back into a recession, Reuters’ David Gaffen isn’t so sure. “It may not happen — but when a lot of people are trying to convince you that something’s not going to happen, it can make you believe that it’s more likely than not.”

- The commercial real estate market hasn’t collapsed because of a strategy known as “extend and pretend,” essentially banks giving troubled borrowers time to make good on their bets until the economy recovers. “Sometimes, it actually works. But, usually it doesn’t — especially when practiced on an industry-wide scale,” Henry Blodget writes at Business Insider.

- The LeBron James surreality show is about to begin. He’s “leaning” toward Miami, but we still have faith he’s coming to the Big Apple. Let the “LeBronference” begin.

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