07.07 2011

Luring Hollywood to Sarasota

While Sarasota’s stepped-up tax credits and beautiful locations might make it more attractive to filmmakers than it has been in the past, it still faces stiff competition from states across the nation, some of which have a decided head start.

When New Mexico and Louisiana jumped on the film-incentives bandwagon to stop losing productions to Canada in the early 2000s, they had few competitors.

But as of 2011, at least 43 states offer either tax credits or cash rebates to film and television productions, ranging from simple sales-tax or hotel-occupancy-tax relief to credits of more than 40 percent of expenditures.

More players means a greater division of the spoils. A good example is California, where in 2003, when only a few states offered incentives, two-thirds of America’s big studio films were made.

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07.07 2011

Obama to extend help for unemployed homeowners to 12 months

 

USA Today is reporting that the Obama administration is trying to make it easier for homeowners who lose their jobs to keep their homes.

The administration today will announce that two programs providing unemployed homeowners a few months’ forbearance on their mortgages will be extended to 12 months, said three administration officials speaking anonymously because the program has not been announced. Thousands of homeowners could benefit from the additional time, although not all jobless homeowners will be eligible.

The action is being taken as part of the administration’s effort to help prevent foreclosures while unemployment remains above 9% and the economy struggles to rebound. In May, 6.2 million people — 45% of the unemployed — had been without work for at least 27 weeks. New Read more…

07.07 2011

Union tells Cuomo Champlain Hudson line not good for NY

IBEW Local 97 has written Gov.

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07.07 2011

Pelosi: “We are not Greece”

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) says she is confident a debt ceiling deal will be reached before the federal government defaults on its obligations on August 2.

“With all due respect to Greece, we are not Greece,” she said in an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Peter Cook Thursday afternoon. “What I would say to the markets is that we must and we will not default on these loans. This is about paying past debt. It’s not about lifting the ceiling so we can have increased spending in the future. T Read more…

05.07 2011

OPINION: Is LinkedIn at the tipping point?

FOR those in the know, it was little surprise that LinkedIn chose to go public in May with its much-publicised Initial Public Offering.

LinkedIn has been around now for nearly 10 years and, unlike Twitter, has been profitable for much of that.

Early revenue streams came from the obvious recruitment services that arise when you’re sitting on a database of professional contacts and millions of profiles which effectively constitute their CVs.

Its recent timing is interesting, however – any LinkedIn users will likely agree with me that the number of requests for connections has increased considerably in the last six months, particularly since November. The

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05.07 2011

This Is Just To Get You Excited About For Friday’s Jobs Report

It has the potential to be a slow week up until Friday, when the jobs report comes out.

So let’s get the party started now.

Here’s Citi’s Steve Englander, on the matter of what the US dollar might do on the news.

The consensus is for 70k — the central tendency of the distribution is 40k-110k with the fatter tails to the upside. The 70k is the lowest consensus expectation since October of last year. Citi does not have an official forecast but our economists’ 100k NFP forecast is very close to the consensus view. With two year yields back down to 43bps, it looks as if the pain trade in fixed income is a stronger than expected outcome rather than a weaker. The question is how FX will react.

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05.07 2011

Former Coast Bank executive’s sentencing Wednesday

Wednesday, one day shy of his 58th birthday, Coon will face a federal judge and be sentenced to up to five years, though his guilty plea will likely earn him a lesser term.

His scheme helped sink Coast, which was so crippled by bad loans that it was forced into a fire sale that cost its stockholders millions of dollars.

“His actions, for all intents and purposes, took the bank down,” said Alan Tannenbaum, a Sarasota attorney who represents 150 Coast borrowers ensnared in the scam.

It was one of the region’s first white-collar scams to surface during the Great Recession. Others who were caught later — such as Ponzi schemers Arthur Nadel and Beau Diamond — already are serving their time in federal prisons.

Coon pilfered $1.5 million through the fraud he carried out with a Tampa mortgage broker.

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