- The main difference between Citigroup’s (C) $75M settlement with SEC Goldman Sachs’ (GS) $550M settlement is GS was guilty of misleading clients while Citi was guilty of negligently misleading shareholders. But the public is much angrier over GS case, which the “Kid Dynamite” blogger finds hard to fathom. “People should be furious about this Citi case and settlement, but you’ve probably hardly heard a whisper about it.”
- Prospects aren’t looking bright for the restaurant industry. Same-store sales and customer traffic both declined for a third-straight month in June, Calculated Risk reports. “Restaurants are a discretionary expense, and this contraction could be because of the sluggish recovery or might suggest further weakness in consumer spending in the months ahead.”
- Roughly 25% of Americans sit in FICO’s least-creditworthy category, a significant jump from only 15% before the recession. “Some people will lament this, but it has a silver lining,” FusionIQ CEO Barry Ritholtz says. “Deleveraging is certainly a good thing, and forcing consumers off of the credit treadmill may actually help these folks over the long haul.”
- The commercial real estate market is getting ugly, slowly but surely. Delinquent unpaid balance for CMBS increased $3.1B in June to $60.45, and has more than doubled from a year ago, according to Realpoint. “This isn’t quite the disaster in the making that subprime was,” Yves Smith notes. But “I’m not sure why people say there isn’t a CRE crash. It’s just happening in slow motion, so far.”
- ISM manufacturing index fell for a third-straight month in July, but at 55.5, it exceeded economists’ expectations. “Bottom line, while the ISM remains firmly above 50, just ten of the 18 industries surveyed reported growth, with four reporting outright contraction and the drop in new orders is worth watching,” writes Miller Tabak’s Peter Boockvar. “With this said, the market is breathing a sigh of relief that while down for a third month, the ISM is still hanging in as inventory builds, albeit at a slower pace, and export growth continuing.”
- Newspaper advertising sales were less bad in 2Q vs a quarter ago. “But less bad is not the same as good — and the outlook for the remainder of the year is decidedly murky,” writes Newsosaur blogger Alan Mutter.
- A new website — JailbreakMe.com — has sprung up offering an easy way to hack, or “jailbreak,” an iPhone to run applications not authorized by Apple (AAPL).
- “This market is one that moves largely on the basis of economywide hopes and fears,” NYT’s Floyd Norris says. “Company specifics take a back seat.”
- “Remember when we weren’t allowed to say the word ‘recession?’ Like it was anathema?” Todd Harrison says at Minyanville. “Or when we weren’t ‘patriotic’ if we weren’t ‘bullish’ after 9/11?,” he recalls. “Is ‘deflation’ the modern day equivalent of ‘recession?’”
- Battle over the proposed Ground Zero mosque is picking up steam.
