Archive for June 4th, 2008

Filed under: Deals, Industry, Consumer experience, Competitive strategy, Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Yahoo! (YHOO), Sony Corp ADR (SNE)

Anyone who did not think a Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) buyout of Yahoo! (NASDAQ:YHOO) has become less likely should have stopped by the All Things Digital conference. According to Reuters, “Yahoo Inc Chief Executive Jerry Yang said on Wednesday a potential deal with Microsoft has tremendous power, but the software giant appears no longer interested in a full merger.”

The leaves Yahoo! management, its board, and takeover artist Carl Icahn in a tough spot. Many analysts believe that without a deal, the Yahoo! shares could drop back near $20, where they traded before the offer from Redmond. Yahoo! currently changes hands at $27.

The news is a sign that Microsoft thinks it can do almost anything on its own, including challenging Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) in the search business. Gates, Ballmer & Co. have the money to get the engineering hands on board to push better search tech, but user loyalty to Google may be so great that even a much better product from Microsoft will not break its rival’s hold on the market.

Microsoft has had success exceeding the market’s expectations before. No one believed that the company’s Xbox could challenge the Sony (NYSE:SNE) PlayStation franchise.

But, search engines are not game consoles and the rules in one game do not necessarily apply in another.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com and author of the Ten Stocks Under $10 letter.

The headline is straight from Yahoo! News because I don’t think there’s a better way to say it.  Massachusetts is suing H&R Block for Option One Mortgage’s lending practices.  Option One is owned by H&R Block.  It will be interesting to see how this plays out and whether it sets the precedent for future legal action against lenders and brokers.

From the article:

Massachusetts authorities sued H&R Block Inc on Tuesday, charging that its mortgage unit discriminated against black and Latino borrowers and escalated a crisis over property foreclosures in the state.

The lawsuit is the first by a U.S. state to accuse a subprime-mortgage lender of civil rights violations following a wave of foreclosures of homes in poor, often black, neighborhoods nationwide.

The complaint, filed in Suffolk Superior Court, accuses H&R’s subprime-lending subsidiary, Option One Mortgage Corp, of engaging “in unfair and deceptive conduct on a broad scale.”

The complaint said the H&R Block unit charged black and Latino borrowers higher points and fees to close their loans than similarly situated white borrowers and targeted black and Latino consumers with marketing “that pushed the sale of predatory loan products.”

“Marketing loan products that were designed to fail not only harms individuals and families who are struggling to afford their homes, but also has a negative impact on neighboring homeowners and the community at large,” Coakley said in a statement.

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Law, Scandals

U.S. District Judge Sidney Stein dismissed Yoko Ono’s (the former Beatle wife you wish would go away) lawsuit claiming that anti-evolution “documentary” Expelled played a 15-second clip of John Lennon’s song Imagine without her permission.

The judge ruled that, were the case to go to trial, it would likely be found that the excerpt from the song fell within fair-use guidelines.

The defendants were Premise Media Corp. of Dallas, Rampant Films of Sherman Oaks, Calif., and Rocky Mountain Pictures Inc. of Salt Lake City, and the film is narrated by Ben Stein, who is intelligent in some areas (business) and less intelligent in others.

Continue reading Yoko Ono loses battle with Ben Stein-narrated film

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That’s my simple reasoning behind the closure of all remaining Sharper Image stores.

All remaining stores of bankrupt gadget retailer Sharper Image Corp SHRPQ.PK will be closed and liquidated, its new owners said on Sunday.

More than $50 million of inventory is being sold at 86 Sharper Image store-closing sales throughout the United States, liquidators the Hilco Organization and Gordon Brothers said in a statement.

A joint venture led by units of Hilco and Gordon Brothers purchased the company’s assets at a bankruptcy auction last week for $49 million, and plan to continue its wholesale, direct-to-retail, e-commerce and catalog businesses under a new licensing strategy.

The company had filed for bankruptcy protection in February, and put itself up for sale in April, saying a sale was the best route in light of the weak U.S. economy and tight credit market conditions.

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Earnings reports, Analyst reports, Google (GOOG), Starbucks (SBUX), Economic data

Public companies with auction-rate securities on their balance sheets were, in many cases, forced to write-down the value of those assets because they have become illiquid. Firms took on the investments because they were considered as easy to buy and sell as cash, but offered better interest rates. Then the market for the securities stopped trading.

Under GAAP, the companies holding the auction-rate paper had to take a P&L charge.

According to The Wall Street Journal, “According to a study of earnings reports conducted by securities-valuation firm Pluris Valuation Advisors LLC, 402 public companies disclosed that they held variations of auction-rate securities. Half had written down the value of their holdings. Of those that did, the average markdown was 13.2%, the study shows.”

What investors should watch for is the companies which have not acted, because they could face a significant hit in future quarters. That, in turn, could mean a sell-off in their shares. Some companies which do not have huge amounts of cash, could actually face a credit squeeze.

Several fairly big and, one would think smart, companies that took a haircut in Q1 include Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) and Starbucks (NASDAQ: SBUX).

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com. He is also the author of the Ten Stocks Under $10 letter.

I’m about to reveal an extraordinary secret, one that rivals the coordinates for the lost city of Atlantis. As experts and government officials are now in their second year of scrambling for housing solutions it appears that we have found one that works. Here it goes; when you lower prices you actually move […]
Related Posts:
How Many People Overpaid for Their Home in Los Angeles County? Trying to get a Raw Number of Households Underwater.
About
Putting Home Sellers on the Couch: The Psychology of why Sellers Refuse to Lower Prices.
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Riding in the Short Bus of Housing: Southern California Short Sale Numbers. 1 in 10 Homes is a Distress Sale.

I’m about to reveal an extraordinary secret, one that rivals the coordinates for the lost city of Atlantis. As experts and government officials are now in their second year of scrambling for housing solutions it appears that we have found one that works. Here it goes; when you lower prices you actually move sales! Astounding! This is one of the most basic points you learn in economics:supply and demand
Take a look at the graph. Inventory is still very high so the supply curve even with current sales is holding steady simply because of the increase in distressed properties. This has maintained a very high amount of inventory on the market. Prices for a very long time held steady so demand did not move adding further fuel to the growing inventory numbers. Now, we are seeing major price reductions and sales are increasing. Well of course! The demand curve is now budging because the supply and demand of most any economic item is sensitive to price especially one with elastic demand. For example, if prices become too expensive to buy people will simply rent (i.e., Los Angeles). That is a perfect substitute. Items such as insulin have inelastic demand curves since prices can double and people would still pay that price simply because there are no good alternatives.

Today’s news perfectly illustrates the point that housing will move with price changes. Keep in mind these are headlines for the same day:

“(MarketWatch) Decline in home prices accelerates in March

Case Shiller index down 14.4% in March from year earlier

Home prices in 20 major U.S. metropolitan areas have dropped a record 14.4% in the past year, Standard & Poor’s said Tuesday.

The 20-city Case-Shiller home price index fell 2.2% from February to March. This is the 16th consecutive decline in prices.

And for 10 major cities, prices fell by 2.4% in March and by 15.3% for the past 12 months.

S&P’s Case-Shiller index tracks sales of the same homes over time, so it’s not influenced by the mix of homes sold in a period. However, it closely tracks only 20 cities, many of which had participated in the housing bubble earlier in the decade.”

Okay, not much of a surprise there with that news. We all expected that prices would continue on their downward trend simply because the amount of distressed properties on the market is going to bring the overall aggregate price measures down. The year over year drop of 14.4% is rather astounding given that prior to this housing bubble, we have never witnessed a year over year median price decline since the Great Depression.

The sharpest declines of course are happening in major bubble areas such as Las Vegas (down a stunning 25.9%), Phoenix, and Miami. In the same day news cycle we get that home sales actually went up last month:

“NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — New home sales rose unexpectedly in April but remained near historically low levels, according to a key government report on the battered housing market.

April sales came in at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 526,000, a Census Bureau report showed, up 3.3% from a revised 509,000 in March. The reading was above the consensus forecast of 520,000, according to economists surveyed by Briefing.com.

But home sales were down 42% from a year earlier. April’s reading was the second-lowest annual rate since October 1991, behind March of this year.

“The momentum is still downward, and that April number is still weak,” said National Association of Home Builders chief economist David Seiders. “April marks only a partial reversal of that steep March decline.”

Clearly the market is gravitating to the massive price drop more than the meager rise in sales which is still at a historical low. But make no mistake about this; home sales will increase if the price is right. These two reports although contradictory on the surface make perfect economic sense. Lower prices are bringing more people into the market to purchase homes.

Calculated Risk as usual has an excellent piece discussing the current sales numbers:

nhsmonthsapril08.jpg

*Source: Calculated Risk

So even though there was a slight movement up in sales as you can see from the graph, we are still at historical highs and months of supply which really is the true barometer of market health is still very high as well. Most historical trends show a healthy market having about 6 months of supply. To highlight this trend let us look at Los Angeles and Phoenix from the latest report:

Case Shiller

You can already see that Los Angeles at least according to the Case-Shiller Index is back to early 2004 prices and Phoenix is now back to early 2005 prices. Los Angeles from its peak in September of 2007 is now down 24.3% and Phoenix is now down from its peak in June of 2006 a whopping 36.2%. Keep in mind that for Los Angeles, we should expect as we get closer to the yearly anniversary of the peak should prices stay low, to see a 30 to 40 percent yearly price drop.

The logic is simple here folks. Prices need to drop substantially for sales to increase. The two reports simply reaffirm this age old economic wisdom.

Did You Enjoy The Post? Subscribe to Dr. Housing Bubble’s Blog to get updated housing commentary, analysis, and information

Related Posts:
How Many People Overpaid for Their Home in Los Angeles County? Trying to get a Raw Number of Households Underwater.
About
Putting Home Sellers on the Couch: The Psychology of why Sellers Refuse to Lower Prices.
Consulting
Riding in the Short Bus of Housing: Southern California Short Sale Numbers. 1 in 10 Homes is a Distress Sale.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

Filed under: Good news, Management, Boston Scientific (BSX), Options, Technical Analysis

BSX logoBoston Scientific (NYSE: BSX) shares are trading higher after the company announced its chief executive officer, Jim Tobin, will remain with the company and shift his focus to day-to-day operations. If you think that the stock won’t fall by too much in the coming months, then now could be a good time to look at a bullish hedged trade on BSX.

After hitting a one-year high of $16.67 last June, the stock hit a one-year low of $10.76 in January. BSX opened this morning at $13.20. So far today the stock has hit a low of $13.16 and a high of $13.56. As of 12:45, BSX is trading at $13.36, up$ 0.25 (1.9%). The chart for BSX looks bullish and steady, while S&P gives the stock a neutral 3 STARS (out of 5) hold rating.

For a bullish hedged play on this stock, I would consider a November bull-put credit spread below the $10 range. A bull-put credit spread is an options position that combines the purchase and sale of put options to hedge risk in case the stock doesn’t do what you think but still leverage nice returns. For this particular trade, we will make an 8.7% return in just six months as long as BSX is above $10 at November expiration. BSX would have to fall by more than 25% before we would start to lose money. Learn more about this type of trade here.

Continue reading Boston Scientific (BSX) CEO staying put

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Filed under: Major movement, Good news, Options, Technical Analysis

MVL logoMarvel Entertainment (NYSE: MVL) shares are trading higher this morning after Standard & Poor’s announced that it added the stock to its S&P MidCap 400 index. MVL is rising today as investors believe that after these announcement, demand for the stock will be unusually high as mutual funds scramble to add the stock. If you think that the stock won’t fall by too much in the coming months, then now could be a good time to look at a bullish hedged trade on MVL.

After hitting a one-year low of $21.21 in August, the stock hit a one-year high of $35.00 in May. MVL opened this morning at $34.85. So far today the stock has hit a low of $34.48 and a high of $35.75. As of 12:55, MVL is trading at $35.17, up $1.30 (3.8%). The chart for MVL looks bullish and steady, while S&P gives the stock a neutral 3 STARS (out of 5) hold rating.

For a bullish hedged play on this stock, I would consider a July bull-put credit spread below the $30 range. A bull-put credit spread is an options position that combines the purchase and sale of put options to hedge risk in case the stock doesn’t do what you think but still leverage nice returns. For this particular trade, we will make a 6.4% return in just seven weeks as long as MVL is above $30 at July expiration. Marvel would have to fall by more than 14% before we would start to lose money. Learn more about this type of trade here.

Continue reading Marvel Entertainment (MVL) added to S&P MidCap 400

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Filed under: Bad news, Products and services, Ford Motor (F), Housing

The bad news keeps coming for Ford (NYSE: F).

Today, the company announced that sales in the U.S. were down 15% in May. Not surprisingly, low-mileage pickup trucks and SUVs led the way. Sales of the F-150, Ford’s bread and butter profit machine and its top-selling vehicle for over 30 years, dropped a whopping 31%.

Ford’s miserable sales numbers come as Detroit neighbor General Motors (NYSE: GM) announced that it will close four truck plants and maybe even sell its Hummer division.

Both Ford and GM seem to finally be recognizing that their preferred approach to making and selling vehicles — getting every penny out of their low-tech, low-mileage trucks while avoiding the engineering costs and difficulties of making high-tech, fuel efficient cars — is finally hitting an immovable wall. Ford’s marketing chief, Jim Farley, said that Ford is witnessing “the most dramatic shift in customer segmentation” in decades as consumers move away from trucks. He called May “a watershed month” and claimed that the auto industry is just “catching up with the breathtaking choices that customers are now making.”

Continue reading Ford sales plunge in May

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