I don’t even think these guys bothered to read the results at all. They are comparing revenues pre-multi billion dollar acquisition with the post acquisition entity. Hey, I can double my revenues if I purchased a company that had 3x my revenues too! This is just sloppy! Yet, these euphoric headlines were all over the place as MS stock climbs nearly 10%. Yes, MS did relatively better than GS, but GS is a federally insured hedge fund (that’s right, I said it)...
Actually, I did tell you last quarter (and 2 years ago) that not only is Goldman basically the world's largest, federally insured hedge fund (with trading influenced earnings volatility to prove it), but that most pundits have forgotten their balance sheet threatens solvency in times of high volatility and rapidly declining prices. 2008, anyone? Anyone???

CNBC (the world’s biggest Goldman cheerleader) reports “Goldman Sachs’ Revenue Falls, but Profit Beats Views” even as Bloomberg reports “Goldman Sachs Profit Falls 82%, Misses Estimates on Trading-Revenue Drop”. Whoah… It’s hard to get a straight answer out of these news guys, ain’t it?

A BoomBustBlog reader sent me this in the mail last night and I thought I would share it with the community. I feel it is also worth taking a refresh of the consumer sector research that we released a few months ago…

Reggie:

I took a screen shot of my play money account and the shorts from the four part series on why the consumer isn’t coming back.  Consumer retail has been nailed since May and from the 4 stocks you picked, here are two I chose to follow.

For the first two quarters of this year, we’ve been pounding the pavement on the risks inherent throughout Europe. The 50+ article (and counting) series known as the Pan-European Sovereign Debt Crisis is rife with opinion, analysis, commentary (albeit rather smart ass commentary), and data that is hard to come across from objective sources.

JPM is leaving no stone unturned in propping up its operational performance and giving out green signals, even if it involves the most unsustainable measures. While in 1Q10, trading income came to the rescue of the sagging core operations, in 2Q10, it was management’s over-exuberance (defying logic and rationality, to some extent) resulting in drastic reduction in loan loss provisioning and beefing up the bottom line.

Don't be surprised if Microsoft is the one to pull to the lead of the smartphone wars! There's something to be said for being the de facto enterprise standard in productivity, a top server vender, the majority market share in browsers, and owning one of the top gaming platforms. Plus, now their motivated due to Apple and Google taking their lunch money.
Why isn't the popular financial media reporting the fact that Greece's funding costs increased after the $1 trillion dollar bailout? Why isn't it pointed out the Portugal's credit rating has been dropped - post bailout? Exactly what is $1 trillion US dollars good for these days - trick question, but I dare 'ya to answer :-)