Carlos Beltran

Links 7/15/2010

Posted by Steven Russolillo on July 15, 2010
Banks, Economy, Federal Reserve, Housing, Internet, Markets, Media, Oil, Recession, S&P 500, Sports, Technology, Unemployment, Washington / Comments Off

- SEC reaches a $550 million settlement with Goldman Sachs. “The regulators get to claim victory while the Eloi get to continue their frolic atop the fluffy clouds of privilege and untouchability,” Josh Brown writes at The Reformed Broker. “Nobody admits wrongdoing, rightdoing or frankly, admits anything at all for that matter.”

- “This is surely a massive win for Goldman, whose entire business was at stake if it was found guilty of serious wrongdoing,” Reuters blogger Felix Salmon says. “The risk, of course, is that Goldman’s victory here will only serve to exacerbate its arrogance. Could the Squids of West Street become even more insufferable, now?”

- Business Insider has a list of winners and losers in the Goldman fraud settlement case.

- Lots of data to digest this morning, and most of it isn’t promising. Producer prices fall for third straight month and manufacturing data was weak. Headline jobless claims number looks good, but seasonal adjustments played a large role in the better-than-expected figure. “Due to the seasonal issues around the adjustments with GM doing the opposite of what they’ve historically done has made initial claims more difficult to analyze for a few weeks,” says Miller Tabak’s Peter Boockvar. “One thing though is for sure, up to 3 million workers will be falling off the extended claims rolls as benefits run out.”

- Naked Capitalism blogger Yves Smith relays an interesting nugget from HousingWire: for every one home currently on the market, two are waiting to be sold. “The scary part here is this estimate of market overhang refers only to foreclosed and distressed property,” she says. “There is another category of hidden inventory, people who would like to sell but aren’t even listing their houses.”

- Oil has finally stopped gushing into the Gulf. For now, as BP tests a new containment cap.

- Apple’s (AAPL) acquisition of mapping company Poly9 marks the second maps-focused company AAPL has bought in the last year. “In the short term, and with Poly9 specifically, Apple is buying its Google Earth,” Business Insider’s Dan Frommer says. “But more broadly, Apple is preparing for life after Google.”

- H-P’s (HPQ) Android tablet, which was supposed to hit the market in 4Q, has been delayed and won’t ship before the end of the year, Digital Daily blogger John Paczkowski reports, citing anonymous sources. Reason for the delay aren’t clear. “Perhaps, H-P has decided to focus its resources on the future webOS slate PC that its new Palm unit is developing,” he says. “Or perhaps the company is reconsidering its multi-OS tablet strategy in light of the Palm acquisition. After all, H-P has said repeatedly it is ‘doubling down’ on webOS.”

- “Even as lenders struggle to pull themselves out of the credit crisis, signs of a new and potentially dangerous infatuation with risky borrowers are emerging,” WSJ reports.

- Pretty pumped to see Carlos Beltran patrolling center field once again for the Mets.

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