Archive for January 6th, 2008

If you were to ask me in September of 2006 if I would still be blogging, the answer would have been no. From multiple estimates, there are approximately 50 million to 70 million blogs out there. It seems like there is a bubble in blogs! Many blogs do not survive past a few months because it does take commitment and a solid readership. That is why I wanted to take this moment, how fitting that it is the 200th post, and thank all readers to this site. Whether you agree with the content or not I do appreciate each and everyone of you that take the time to read the articles. I was looking at the numbers today and there are 3,053 comments left on this site since I started blogging. Many of you have contributed to the housing dialogue even when it was unpopular. Thank you for doing so.

When I started this site, there really wasn’t too many “bubble blogs” out there. You had a handful of bloggers yet the majority focused on general economics, gold, and other financial issues except the major housing and credit bubble that we were living in. In the matter of two years, this blogging niche exploded. It would be easy to take all credit for the explosion of traffic but realistically people hungered for an alternative source of media and many realized that this housing market had gone off track. If you were to look at it scientifically, bubble blogs exploded just about the time the housing market peaked. Now I know many other sites have surpassed that 1 million hurdle but I think this is a big moment for the site.

Now why blog about real estate especially about real estate in California? I invest in out of state rental property and believe that real estate bought at the right price, is the best investment you will ever make. If I didn’t believe this, I wouldn’t own real estate. I may be one of the few so called bubble bloggers who actually owns any property. So why not move out of the state? I am a native born Californian and believe many readers are in the same boat. I love the area. This is my home. I have no problem leasing a home in an area of my choice while gaining the benefits of real estate with property bought elsewhere at the right price. In fact, the majority of the 10,000,000 residents in Los Angeles County rent. This is always an argument levied on those that do not own. Leasing is the equivalent of flushing money down the toilet. No, getting a risky mortgage at a peak price is the equivalent of flushing money down the toilet. However, California has gotten to a point where middle class families cannot afford a basic starter home without going with exotic financing. The argument many housing bulls will throw out is that income doesn’t matter. Well once all the creative financing died down income does matter; in fact during the ABC presidential debates yesterday both Republicans and Democrats polled mentioned that the economy was the number one issue. And if you want any hard evidence of a bubble, just take a look at our Real Homes of Genius section where we track over priced homes throughout the state. Countless people that I know and you may know, had such a psychological desire to own a home that they bought homes in the last few years disregarding all evidence that a bubble was imminent. Many felt that if the housing payment became too much, they would simply sell. Others had dreams of making a hefty sum where home appreciation hit 20+ percent on a year over year basis. For those of you not in the California area, there was a period where homes were going up $100,000 on a yearly basis. Three years in L.A. County where the year over year appreciation rate was 20+ percent. From October of 2002 to October of 2005, appreciation rates measured on a yearly basis hovered around 20 percent. In fact, in June of 2004 we hit a 32.3 percent year over year gain! Surreal. Something was not right about that. And the fact that housing has steadily been declining for a year shows how we were in fact in a bubble fueled by easy financing and to a large extent, greed.

What to Expect for 2008?

I’ve made multiple predictions throughout the many articles that housing was going to decline in late 2007 or early 2008. In fact, in late 2006 and early 2007 the signs were already pointing to this slowdown via leading indicators. This wasn’t rocket science. Inventories were rising, delinquencies were faltering, builders were scaling back, and yet not much was said about the impending crash since prices were still hitting record highs. At this time, many housing bulls were predicting that housing would be positive for the year and some even went out and said there would be double-digit appreciation! I kept looking at incomes and how people were financing their homes and clearly, they were stretched to the absolute credit max. In fact, even Ben Bernanke was quoted as saying that the subprime problem would be contained. The same subprime problem that brought about a credit freeze in August and the same non-problem that the central banks are now combating with and has spread into virtually every area of the credit markets; credit markets that include other areas aside from scapegoated subprime. From year-end of 2003 to about the middle of 2007 there were about 5 million subprime loans originated. Of these 5 million loans 2.5 million are still out there with $526 billion still looking to reset from high 7 to 9 percent rates to 10 to 12 percent rates. In no shape or form are we out of this mess. And many of the 2.5 million loans that are no longer on the books are no longer there because an appreciating market masked a lot of bad financial moves. People that got in trouble were able to sell in 2005, 2006, and possibly early 2007. Now, this option is off the table for many metro areas with declining housing prices. And with poor employment and stagnant wages, any housing payment is going to hurt. It just goes to show the fine line many people were walking. Going zero down or with very small amounts of money, a 5 percent decline wiped out any equity position they had in the home. Remember that surge of homeownership rates? Well we are almost back to pre-exotic financing level rates.

2008 is going to be a very busy year for the housing markets but more importantly, the overall health of the global economy. With unemployment suddenly spiking to 5 percent, it is clear that the credit contagion is spreading throughout the markets and folks are simply in debt up to their eye-balls. We are going to have a very busy year in 2008 and I appreciate you taking the time to wander on over to Dr. Housing Bubble!

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So far this year, online video is making a big mark. Just look at the Iowa caucuses, where voters posted their efforts on YouTube and then spread them across social networks like MySpace and Facebook. So what else might we see in 2008 for online video?

Well, I had a chance to interview Chase Norlin, who is the CEO of Pixsy (an online video company). According to him:

1. Expect to see continued enforcement by copyright holders over their online video assets; this will drive wider adoption of DRM and licensing platforms.

2. The online video ad category is growing but not at the pace to support the multitude of companies pursuing this market, and a shakeout is therefore likely.

3. More consolidation in the online video space and all other key internet categories.

4. Continued growth in the semipro video publishing market as content producers create and distribute their material in a more cost-effective manner than traditional outlets.

5. More unique video programming, created for the web, making its way to television.

Tom Taulli is the author of various books, including The Complete M&A Handbook and The Edgar Online Guide to Decoding Financial Statements. He also operates DealProfiles.com.

 

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A few days behind schedule, but here is my list of eight stocks. Included in the list there are two holdovers from the 2007 list of seven stocks. I do not see any value in creating an entirely new list when I have done well over the years riding the winners. This is particularly true if the reasons you bought the stock in the first place remain valid.

These eight picks for the year will be tracked monthly with updated results. The initial share prices are from December 28, 2007. They are focused on defense, energy, food, gold, metals, mining, oil, power, and every one pays a dividends. The following are my “Quick Takes” in alphabetical order with links to the complete stories.

Anglo American plc (ADR) (NASDAQ: AAUK) is a world-class player in precious metals, diamonds, and commodities, which are all growing in demand. When the world economy is booming, all of its mining products are sought after, and when the market runs scared, gold goes up. It pays a dividend yield of 1.9% and is trading almost 25% off its 52-week high. For full story: Chasing Value: Anglo American diamonds and gold are your best friend. The closing price on December 28, 2007, for AAUK was $30.79.

Bunge Limited (NYSE: BG) is the world leader in the production of soybean products and still growing at a rapid rate. While sporting a P/E ratio of 19, which is low for a growth stock, it also has a tiny P/S ratio of 0.33. Although it jumped 70% last year, that may be just the beginning. It’s my food story selection from Serious Money: ADM, Bunge, Potash Corp. — it’s a hungry world. All three should be on your watch list. I had to split hairs to choose only one. I backed away from ADM because there is a slight chance that the ethanol business could slip if oil prices do. Potash had the highest percentage increase and also has a scary P/E and P/S. For full story Chasing Value: Bunge Limited (BG) in name only. The closing price on December 28, 2007, for BG was $119.03.

Huaneng Power International, Inc. (ADR) (NYSE: HNP) is one of my favorite stocks on planet earth, and I must have said so at least once a month. I even wrote a story titled Volatile Markets: Huaneng Power (HNP) is my pick for the next 50 years. It is one of the holdovers from last year. It is not the bargain it was when I bought in at $26.50, but at the current price just under $40 per share it’s 30% off it’s high and it still pays a 3.5% yield. For full story: Chasing Value: Huaneng Power still the one in China. The closing price on December 28, 2007, for HNP was $41.75.

Loews Corp. (NYSE: LTR) is a “puny” version of Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.B) but is no less well managed and has produced significant shareholder equity over the past three decades. It owns interests in oil drilling, insurance, gas pipelines, and hotels. It has announced that it plans to spin-off Lorillard, the makers of Newport brand cigarettes. When everyone on Wall Street is scrambling for cover this year, I expect the Tisch family to be cherry picking and bargain hunting. For full story: Chasing Value: Loews Corp. has all the right pieces. Closed on December 28, 2007, at $49.35.

Newcastle Investment Corp. (NYSE: NCT) is a REIT paying about a 22% yield. It does not real estate, instead it holds loans on nonresidential properties. NCT is on record to fully fund its dividend and anticpates one billion dollars in loans to be paid off in the coming year. For full story: Chasing Value: Newcastle’s 22% yield will reward patience. The closing price on December 28, 2007, for NCT was $13.08.

Raytheon Co. (NYSE: RTN) The defense sector has beaten the Standard & Poors 500 Index four eight years running through 2007 and I do not see anything stoping this trend in 2008. The basic metrics are sound, with a PEG ratio of 1.13, a P/B of 2.4, and a P/S of 1.3. For full story: Chasing Value: Raytheon in defense of the nation and your portfolio. The closing price on December 28, 2007, for RTN was $61.51.

Reliance Steel & Aluminum (NYSE: RS) is solid, and resiliant, providing 100,000 products made of carbon, alloy, stainless, and specialty steel, as well as aluminum, brass, copper, and titanium. By being a producer of value-added products and serving more than 125,000 customers it has a very broad global base. Reliance has a low P/E ratio of 8 (TTM) a very low P/S of 0.50 and a great ROE of 25%. For full story: Chasing Value: Reliance Steel & Aluminum adding value globally. On December 28, 2007, RS closed at $54.32 per share.

Valero Energy Corp. (NYSE: VLO) is the largest independent oil refiner in North America and looking to increase profit margins in 2008, while any competitors will take eight to ten years to bring a new refinery on line. It was my top pick among 2007’s seven, and I am bringing it back for an encore. For full story: Chasing Value: Valero Energy (VLO) is just so refined. The closing price on December 28, 2007, for VLO was $70.55.

This year’s “stalking horse” will be Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.B). Note that I will be tracking the ‘B’ shares, not the more expensive ‘A’ shares. It was one of the stocks I considered for inclusion in the 8, but it did not make the cut. I did suggest that it be on your watch list: Chasing Value: Scratch Berkshire Hathaway from the 2008 list. It will be interesting to follow it and see how it fares against what is on the list. Last year the stalking horse was Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG), and as a portfolio of one beat my picks and most everything else, see: Chasing Value: 7 for 2007 review: Props to Cramer for his 2007 picks.

There are sure to be some surprises during the year, hopefully to the upside. Newcastle is likely to produce the biggest swings given the uncertainy in the financial and real estate markets, but I think it has the greatest potential to rise as well. I will also be tracking the the indices as I did last year. The following closing numbers will be the starting point.

To find potential opportunities and verify my track record, read Chasing Value and Serious Money.

DISCLOSURE: I currently own shares of AAUK, BRK.B, HNP, NCT,and VLO

Sheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the principal for design and research at an architecture & planning firm.

 

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