Related Faves from mohit

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    7
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - 4 hours ago | seattle, housing, real estate, economy, news
    Forbes: Seattle is #1 | Seattle Bubble — News & discussion about real estate & the housing bubble in the Seattle area.

    I think this is a little misleading since it's based on YOY changes..and Seattle was ranked the #8 BEST place last year.

    Quoted: But in cities like Seattle, Jacksonville, Fla., and St. Louis—the hardest major cities in which to sell a home—even sellers who have substantially lowered their prices aren’t finding it easy to move their houses.
    ...
    Here’s the specific entry for #1 ranked Seattle. Here’s the whole list of Forbes’ hardest places to sell a home:

  • vote
    6
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - yesterday | news, cnn, fareed zakaria, tv
    Show Pages - Fareed Zakaria GPS - CNN.com

    Great Sunday morning show on CNN at 10am Pacific. I especially enjoy the second half where international analysts give the global perspective on issues that I otherwise only hear covered from the U.S. perspective.

    Quoted: Fareed Zakaria GPS is an hour-long program that takes a comprehensive look at foreign affairs and the policies shaping our world. Every week we bring you an in-depth interview with a world leader, as well as a panel of international analysts who examine the major global developments of the week.

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    3
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - 3 days ago | politics, news, america, splurge, taxes
    America Needs A Turnaround Plan

    Quoted: He asked me where America was going to get the $700bn needed for the splurge. I reminded him that the legislation (at least last I looked) only authorized $350bn upfront and only $250bn of that would be funded initially. I pointed out to Nathan that if we up and left Irag this month and walked away from all of our financial commitments to Iraq and it’s security, we’d save $250bn over the next two years. We could use that money buying the crap assets, holding them through the downturn, and then flip them when things get better, hopefully for a profit. That’s a hell of a lot better than spending $250bn providing a police force for Iraq while they assemble an oil-funded surplus for their own account, not ours.

  • vote
    5
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - 5 days ago | news, google, investing, finance
    Google stock fell on error; Nasdaq raises close - Forbes.com

    Wow, haven't heard of anything like this before.

    Quoted: The exchange raised Google (nasdaq: GOOG - news - people )'s closing price to $400.52 - a 5 percent gain for the day - and canceled all trades below that amount and above $425.29 between 3:57 p.m. and 4:02 p.m. EDT.

  • vote
    17
    5 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - 6 days ago | news, politics, economics, bailout
    Commentary: Bankruptcy, not bailout, is the right answer - CNN.com

    ReFaving @zzelinski. Almost everybody in the media is saying the nonapproval of the bailout is a disaster. Further, they argue that those who opposed the bill did so because of politics (e.g. the "Main Street" voters they represent want to punish "Wall Street") but are not giving more thoughtful analysis.

    This is the first article I've read that gives some high quality reasons why a bailout might not be the right approach.

    Quoted: Talk of Armageddon, however, is ridiculous scare-mongering. If financial institutions cannot make productive loans, a profit opportunity exists for someone else. This might not happen instantly, but it will happen.

    Quoted: Further, the current credit freeze is likely due to Wall Street's hope of a bailout; bankers will not sell their lousy assets for 20 cents on the dollar if the government might pay 30, 50, or 80 cents.

    Quoted: The obvious alternative to a bailout is letting troubled financial institutions declare bankruptcy. Bankruptcy means that shareholders typically get wiped out and the creditors own the company.
    ...
    Bankruptcy punishes those who took excessive risks while preserving those aspects of a businesses that remain profitable.

  • vote
    3
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - 12 days ago | iraq, politics, news, finance, budget, bailout
    PolitiFact | The Iraq war, for $100 month

    The Iraq war costs about $12 billion a month. For perspective, the bailout is estimated at $700 billion.

    She said they took the Bush administration’s 2008 request for war funding – $196-billion – and divided it by 12 to get a monthly cost. That works out to $16-billlion for both wars and about $12-billion just for the Iraq portion.

  • vote
    5
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - 15 days ago | news, economy, banking, finance
    Don't Worry - Forbes.com

    A perspective

    Quoted:Gales of punitive destruction are knocking down one investment bank after another, while gales of creative destruction continue to move the economy forward. In fact, real gross domestic product (GDP) has grown 2.2% in the past year and accelerated to a 3.3% growth rate in the second quarter.

  • vote
    13
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - 16 days ago | news, politics, hagel, palin, obama
    CNN Political Ticker: All politics, all the time  Blog Archive -  Hagel: Palin experience a ‘stretch’ « - Blogs from CNN.com

    Quoted: Sen. Chuck Hagel has become one of the most prominent Republicans to openly question VP nominee Sarah Palin’s qualifications on Thursday.

  • vote
    10
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - 20 days ago | mccain, obama, palin, news, politics
    Rove: McCain went 'too far' in ads - CNN.com

    Quoted: Former Bush adviser Karl Rove said Sunday that Sen. John McCain had gone "one step too far" in some of his recent ads attacking Sen. Barack Obama.

  • vote
    1
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - 26 days ago | technology, policy, news, cell phone
    Senator examining rising text messaging rates - Yahoo! News

    Quoted: Kohl said he is particularly concerned that all four of the companies appear to have adopted identical price increases at nearly the same time. "This conduct is hardly consistent with the vigorous price competition we hope to see in a competitive marketplace," he wrote.