CNBC Forecasts for 2012 – December 28th, 2011

Dec 28, 2011 by

CNBC Forecasts for 2012 – December 28th, 2011

Bank of America Bails on Merrill Lynch

Bank of America flops again about money-raising and puts Merrill Lynch, the world’s largest retail brokerage, up for sale, having acquired it in a $48.7 billion stock-swap deal during the height of the financial crisis in 2008. Brokers at Merrill rejoice, and Canadian giants TD Bank Group and RBC Royal Bank take a serious look at acquiring Merrill.
- Gary Kaminsky

 

Obama’s Tax Smackdown

Regardless of whether President Obama wins reelection, he will kill the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy in December 2012. Investors will flock to take advantage of a 15 percent capital gains rate that will go back to 20 percent, dumping profitable assets ahead of the change on Jan. 1, 2013. To compound the economic uncertainty, Congressional leaders will fail, as usual, to agree on measures to avoid automatic spending cuts that will take effect in January 2013.
- Greg Valliere

 

Bye-Bye Blankfein

Lloyd Blankfein will retire as CEO of Goldman Sachs, exhausted after serving as chairman and chief executive since June 2006. He’s weathered the credit bubble of 2007, the financial crisis, the transformation of the firm away from proprietary trading, financial reform and a life-or-death lawsuit with the SEC. Many people believe Goldman needs post-crisis leadership — and I wouldn’t be surprised if Blankfein comes to agree with them next year.
- John Carney

 

FaceFlix? NetBook?

With its stock having plummeted, Netflix (lock, stock and off-balance sheet content costs) is acquired by (drumroll!) Facebook, on whose board Netflix CEO Reed Hastings sits.
- Herb Greenberg

 

Gasoline Go-Go Again

Retail gasoline prices rise above $4 a gallon, toward the record high of 2008. Crude oil prices may provide the foundation, but gasoline will likely take off on its own merits. Gasoline futures, more than oil, drive prices at the pump. Gasoline prices usually are at their lows in the fourth quarter and peak between March and May, as refineries undergo maintenance and switch from winter-grade to summer-grade gasoline. Further fueling the surge: the closure of a large refinery near Philadelphia and possible shutdowns of two more along the Delaware River.
- Sharon Epperson

 

Gasoline Go-Go Again

Retail gasoline prices rise above $4 a gallon, toward the record high of 2008. Crude oil prices may provide the foundation, but gasoline will likely take off on its own merits. Gasoline futures, more than oil, drive prices at the pump. Gasoline prices usually are at their lows in the fourth quarter and peak between March and May, as refineries undergo maintenance and switch from winter-grade to summer-grade gasoline. Further fueling the surge: the closure of a large refinery near Philadelphia and possible shutdowns of two more along the Delaware River.
- Sharon Epperson

 

Dollar Drubs Euro

The European common currency will fall to parity with the U.S. dollar by year’s end. The European Central Bank will be left with little choice in saving banks and their sorry sovereigns other than to print, print, print euros, and more of something almost always leads to a lower price.
- Brian Sullivan

 

Cold On Gold , Gold Goes Cold

I don’t think gold breaks $2,000 an ounce. I think gold has basically peaked and is now a bit overvalued. My prediction is that people will buy more stocks than gold. I’m optimistic about the stock market, so I would not be a gold buyer.
- Larry Kudlow

 

White House Whips Wall Street

The White House won’t change hands. Obama will trounce Romney and be voted in for another four years.
- Jim Cramer

 

Hopeless, Helpless Housing

Home prices will fall another 5 percent through Q2 before bottoming toward year’s end. Prices are already on a downward trajectory, as foreclosure inventories rise. Banks and mortgage servicers are finally working through a huge backlog of delinquent loans. As those distressed properties come to market, they will lower home prices around them. With lower conforming loan levels, as well as a continued tight lending environment and the possibility of rising mortgage interest rates, prices will bottom out in the fall.
-Diana Olick

 

Android Civil War

There will be big changes for the Android market. The Android OS gets praise for its market share, but in 2012 the splintering of the OS will start to pose major problems. Google will use Motorola to try to corral the ecosystem, but the bigger story will be Amazon’s success in ripping Android’s developer community apart. By year’s end, there will be many Androids.
-Jon Fortt

 

Manufactured Jobs Recovery

I have been traveling the U.S. and all I hear of late is that manufacturing in China isn’t like the old days — meaning it’s not so cheap anymore. Of course, it’s still inexpensive — just not as much as in the past. But as the U.S. jobs economy continues to sputter, the cost spread will continue to shrink, and many companies will decide to make things on U.S. shores because the upside could spark sales if the price isn’t too far off.
- Brian Shactman

 

Credit Trumps Debit

Credit cards make a comeback, displacing debit cards as the most-used payment method. Debit cards, once a popular tool to curb spending, lose some of their allure, partly because of new usage fees. The credit card comeback is a sign of both a healthier consumer and hungrier banks. Consumers will show their finances are steadier and pull out the plastic, especially if doing so earns rewards.
- Christina Cheddar-Berk

 

Tesla Time

The upscale electric car company has a huge year coming up with the Model S rolling out mid-year. Could Tesla stumble? Sure. But the more you listen to what the company is saying about Model S orders and the upbeat reports from even the most skeptical analysts on Wall Street, you get a sense Tesla’s time to turn heads will be here by the end of next year.
- Phil Lebeau

 

Social Media Gold Rush

Facebook and Zynga will go public as part of an ongoing stream of social – media related IPOs . Fortune 50 companies will jump on the bandwagon, investing big in these services to reach consumers. Meanwhile, Twitter will launch a sustainable business model, built around the service as a news feed.
- Julia Boorstin

 

 

 

 

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