China Unicom

Links 3/25/2010

- Google (GOOG) dumped from China Unicom’s (CHU) Android devices. “An obvious and, I suppose, inevitable response to Google’s recent defiance of the Chinese government,” John Paczkowski says. “I imagine we’ll be hearing of a similar move by China Mobile in the near future.”

- “The mortgage mods and foreclosure abatement programs are really all about propping up insolvent banking institutions,” Barry Ritholtz writes. “These programs are another losing round of helping Wall Street at the expense of Main Street. It is the worst kind of trickle down economics that has been seen in decades.”

- Bernanke says record-low interest rates still needed to support the economy, but the central bank has to be ready to tighten credit when needed to prevent inflation. His comments helped propel stocks higher. Then ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet said IMF help for debt-strapped Greece would be bad, really bad, which helped push stocks way off the fresh highs they set earlier in the session.

- If you thought 2009 was bad for newspapers, 2010 may be even worse, Newsosaur blogger Alan Mutter says. “If the rate of decay continues to slow in 2010, the industry will shrink at a slower pace than it did last year. But it still will continue to shrink. And declining shrinkage should not be taken as a sign of health.”

- Venture-backed IPOs might be making a comeback. Four non-biotech venture-backed deals have occurred this year, and all have performed fairly well, Paul Kedrosky notes. “Admittedly, four data points aren’t yet much of a trend, but it’s worth pointing we are seeing the beginnings of a resurgence in the venture-backed IPO market in 2010.”

- It may be a lost decade for some buy-and-hold investors, but keep in mind “some investing rules never go out of style,” Tom Petruno writes. “Try to buy good businesses, try to get them when they’re relatively cheap, and don’t underestimate the power of dividend income over time. And the cardinal rule: Stay well-diversified.”

- Tepid revenue growth won’t placate market much longer. “If we don’t start seeing a pick-up in top-line growth this market is not going to be celebrating for long and the recent optimism in stocks will be proven wrong,” Pragmatic Capitalist says.

- Once again, another weak Treasury auction today. Hard to pinpoint exactly what’s causing it, “but something has changed this week in the US Treasury market and the cost of borrowing is going up as it is in Europe too,” Peter Boocvkar says.

- The Dow Jones Internet Index, which last got any press back when pets.com was still around, surpassed its pre-Lehman levels last summer, and is marching higher and now making a run at its highs from 2007, Bespoke notes.

- AAII’s sentiment survey shows percentage of respondents who expect the market to rise has dropped two weeks in a row, even as stocks keep setting fresh highs. “This is not typical,” Jason Goepfert writes.

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Links 3/4/2010

- “I cannot figure out the thought process behind putting a consumer protection agency into the hands of the Fed,” FusionIQ CEO Barry Ritholtz notes. “This is the same regulatory body that gave a total pass to the non-bank lenders at the heart of the subprime, APR and exotic loan issues.”

- Big banks are bad for the economy just like they were 100 years ago when their powerful influence shaped the financial playing field in their favor, NYT’s Economix blog says. “Just as it did 100 years ago, the consensus on big banks has to change. In this instance, either we break them up, or they will soon break us all.”

- “The longer the economy expands without boosting payrolls, the less likely that expansion is to be sustained,” Economist’s Free Exchange blog says.

- Investors are brushing aside the market’s late January/early February declines and seem focused on brighter times ahead. At least that’s what the latest American Association of Individual Investors survey says, as bearish sentiment fell to 26.2%, the lowest reading since early January and third lowest mark since early 2009, Bespoke points out.

- When Apple (AAPL) CEO Steve Jobs announced lawsuit against HTC for patent infringement, he said in no uncertain terms that competitors should stop stealing their technology. “That’s not the language of a licensing dispute or the beginning of a polite negotiation. That’s the language of a man aggrieved,” Daring Fireball blogger John Gruber writes.

- Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg remains in no rush to take his social networking behemoth public. Judging from the stock performance this year of the four big digital giants, Facebook’s not missing out on much upside, Kara Swisher says.

- Huffington Post had a staggering 40M unique visitors last month. “Eyeballs are eyeballs,” Peter Kafka writes. “Next up: Turning them into dollars.”

- Despite Google’s threats to pull out of China, China Unicom (CHU) says it still plans on selling handsets that run GOOG’s Android operating system.

- House approves $15 billion jobs plan.

- Sony’s looking to seriously get back in the game. It’s developing a new collection of portable gadgets that connect to its coming online media service and are designed to compete against Apple’s iPhone and iPad.

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