Archive - Jun 22, 2010 - Blog entry
Osborne Seems to Have Read the BoomBustBlog UK Financial Analysis, His U.K. Deficit Cuts May Rattle His Coalition But He Has Little Choice
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 06/22/2010 22:16 -0500As the truth unfolds concerning the financial condition of the UK, those states in the Mediterranean south don't seem so bad now, do they???
Prepare for Global Pension War?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 06/22/2010 21:09 -0500Politicians at the G20 be warned: hell hath no fury like a pensioner scorned.
Judge Who Overturned Drilling Ban Held Oil Stocks Back in 2008, So What??
Submitted by Static Chaos on 06/22/2010 20:03 -0500The ink of the ruling against the offshore drilling moratorium is not even dry yet, the media is already jumping all over that Judge Martin Feldman is "greased with oil investments", says Mr. Christopher Helman, an Associate Editor of Forbes.
Good Time to Re-Short the EUR/DLR?
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 06/22/2010 19:57 -0500Where are we in the weak Euro-strong Dollar cycle?
Regions Bank: The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
Submitted by bmoreland on 06/22/2010 11:24 -0500Regions Bank looks fairly weak with a negative Net Operating Income figure in 5 of the last 6 quarters. That said, they do have some good things going for them.
As I Made Very Clear In March, US Housing Has a Way to Fall
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 06/22/2010 11:17 -0500So early in the morning, Bloomberg runs a story, "Sales of Existing Homes in U.S. Probably Climbed on Tax Credit". A few hours later, the housing report comes out and Bloomberg then runs "Existing Home Sales in U.S. Unexpectedly Fell to 5.66 Million Rate in May". Hmmm! BoomBustBlog readers saw this coming way back in March with "It’s Official: The US Housing Downturn Has Resumed in Earnest". Thus far, we've been right on the money. Hey Bloomberg editors, I'm available if you need me...
A Poolside Report from City Center
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 06/22/2010 09:07 -0500 A visit to the worst commercial real estate disaster in human history. Why it is cheaper to spend a weekend in Sin City than it is to stay home.
An 80% occupancy rate, only because 20% of those rooms have been mothballed and taken off the market. Thanks for the great weekend, Kirk!







