Music Industry

Links 4/9/2010

Posted by Steven Russolillo on April 09, 2010
Economic Indicators, Economy, europe, Housing, Internet, Markets, Media, S&P 500, Technology, Unemployment, Washington / Comments Off

- Distressed home sales accounted for 29% of all homes sold in January, the highest level since April 2009. “This is not a good sign,” Barbara Kiviat says. “There’s long been a worry that after last year’s various foreclosure moratoria lifted, we’d see a fresh surge of trouble in the housing market. The latest figures on distressed sales…lend some weight to that argument.”

- Looks like the music industry’s digital sales boom may be over, Peter Kafka notes. Last quarter marked first-time ever that the number of digital songs sold in US decline.

- CNBC commentator Larry Kudlow argues a 5%-10% pay cut for federal employees could have a major impact on the federal budget deficit. But the Times’ Paul Krugman says those pay cuts would be “trivial” at best, and Kudlow’s picture is a fiscal fantasy.

- Spiking Greek bond spreads aren’t affecting over debt-ridden European nations. “That would appear to indicate that markets are not too concerned with the prospects of the Greek end-game leading to some sort of European contagion, which is the most dangerous risk of the Greek crisis,” Economist’s Free Exchange blog writes.

- February wholesale inventories rise for second consecutive month. If next week’s report on business inventories also rises, “it will confirm that we may be seeing the beginning of some inventory stocking after the slowing rate of destocking over the past six months,” notes Miller Tabak’s Peter Boockvar.

- Goldman Sachs (GS) has hired ex-New York Timesman Stephen
Labaton, who until December covered business from Washington, Politico.com reports, suggesting the bank’s aiming to counter its dreadful PR and help navigate the DC regulatory sphere.

- The war between Apple (AAPL) and Adobe (ADBE) is heating up.

- The American economy appears to be in a cyclical recovery that is gaining strength. Firms have begun to hire and consumer spending seems to be accelerating,” Floyd Norris writes. “That is what usually happens after particularly sharp recessions, so it is surprising that many commentators, whether economists or politicians, seem to doubt that such a thing could possibly be happening.”

- But it’s tough to cheer the economy when 15 million people are unemployed, Free Exchange says. “The state of the labor market is a real worry, and the effect of the drag from high levels of long-term unemployment is difficult to predict. Now is no time to declare victory and take a vacation.”

- FusionIQ CEO Barry Ritholtz toes the line between optimistic and pessimistic. Employment and consumer spending still have a long way to go before each returns to pre-recession levels. But as data continues to “impress,” investors would be wise not to fight the tape, he argues.

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