- New ETFs
- Bond ETFs
- Currency ETFs
- Emerging Market ETFs
- Commodity ETFs
- Broad U.S. Equity ETFs
- Sector ETFs
- Specialty ETFs
Despite enjoying 2 full quarters of 'recovery', and coming off a hefty 5.7% GDP quarter - the reality is not so happy down on Main Street (business). Keep in mind the year over year comparisons are versus the period of time (fall 2008/winter 2008-2009) when the recession was at its deepest, so to see continued "growth" in this area is certainly not a green shoot. However, I am sure it can be explained away as all bad news is... let me think of an appropriate head in sand response. Ah yes... let's throw this on the pile of "it's a lagging indicator".
Via Reuters:
There is certainly a huge advantage right now to being a public company versus private and smaller. The larger companies can issue shares - which apparently there is an almost limitless appetite for with all the free money being handed out @ 0.25% rates. While it dilutes shareholders it does provide a lease on life. Meanwhile, the smaller private peers have no such luck as banks seem disinterested in taking that sort of credit risk. Why bother when you borrow from the most generous Time Man of the Year at 0.25% and buy US Treasuries at over 3% and mint money for free, while speculating in the stock market on the side.
Oh well! When there is bad news, as I wrote above - we can conveniently explain it all away as "backwards looking" or a "lagging indicator". The path should be all uphill from here since the economy turned the corner a few quarters ago.
Errr......
Interesting stats, here are more bankruptcy stats I found: http://www.bankruptcylawfirms.com/interest/bankruptcy-statistics.html