Archive for June 14th, 2008

Filed under: Bad news, Employees, Federal Reserve

U.S. consumer confidence in early June plunged to its lowest level in 28 years, an indication American adults are becoming increasingly concerned about rising energy and food prices, job layoffs, and the prospects for a U.S. economic recovery.

The Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers said its reading of confidence fell to 56.7 in June from 59.8 in May.

It was the index’s lowest reading since May 1980 — a period also characterized by high oil/gasoline prices and a sluggish U.S. economy.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had predicted that the May index would fall to 59.8. The index stood at 62.8 in April 2008 and 69.5 in March.

U.S. public: jittery

Economist Peter Dawson told BloggingStocks Friday, June’s consumer sentiment reading shows an American public “with a warranted case of the jitters.”

Continue reading Consumer confidence hits 28-year low in June, says U. Michigan survey

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Yahoo! (YHOO), Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A), Anheuser-Busch Cos (BUD), Lehman Br Holdings (LEH)

While today’s index levels closed up in positive territory, that is only part of the story. The major equity index levels were far higher after the open today. Retail sales rose more than expected but the sell-off we saw earlier in oil did not hold and oil prices took the gas away from us. Fed governor Plosser’s comments about “rates need to rise” didn’t help matters. Below are today’s unofficial closing levels:

Anheuser-Busch Companies Inc. (NYSE: BUD) shares were up almost 5% by the final minutes of trading at $61.29 after InBev confirmed a $65.00 initial buyout offer for the beer giant last night. Interestingly enough, Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. (NYSE: BRK.A, BRK.B) will have pocketed several hundred million dollars on this if you see his current holdings.

Ethanol stocks were battered and tattered today after a key downgrade from Citi in the sector killed the stocks. The floods are part of the culprit, and Verasun Energy, Corp. (NYSE: VSE) was down over 10% to $4.75, a new 52-week low, in the final minutes today.

Charter Communications, Inc. (NASDAQ: CHTR) stock was down almost 3% in the final minutes today at $1.38 after it extended out the date for its dutch auction tender for its debt.

Invitrogen Corp. (NASDAQ: IVGN) saw shares get hit by over 10% to $38.81 after the company announced a highly leveraged acquisition of Applera’s Applied Biosystems (NYSE: ABI). Interestingly enough, Applera’s Celera Group (NYSE: CRA) was largely overlooked on this news.

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (NYSE: LEH) was a loser yet again with shares down 8% at $21.80 in today’s final minutes. The brokerage firm fired its COO and its CFO in a move to try to install confidence, but it ain’t working.

Yahoo! Inc. (NASDAQ: YHOO) might as well change its name to Uh-Oh! Inc. and Jerry Yang is looking so bad that we might want to bring Terry Semel back. The company’s buyout chances from Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT) are formally toast and history, and it is likely entering an ad-search deal with Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG). Yahoo! shares are down 11.6% at $23.11 in the final minutes today.

Great report by the Wall Street Journal on Angelo Mozilo’s penchant for handing out ’special’ mortgages to people that would be helpful to him and his mortgage company.  On the list?  Two former CEO’s of Fannie Mae, the largest GSE that purchases Countrywide mortgages and James Johnson, an adviser to Barack Obama’s campaign.  As the article states, no one really knows if the loans were improperly underwitten or used fraudulent documentation, but the special privilege excerised by CEOs of a government entity are at best in poor judgement.

My response?  Really? It’s sad nothing surprises me about any of this.

From the Wall Street Journal:

Countrywide Financial Corp. makes mortgage loans through a vast network of offices, brokers and call centers. But a few customers have gotten their loans a special way: through Countrywide Chief Executive Angelo Mozilo.

These borrowers, known internally as “friends of Angelo” or FoA, include two former CEOs of Fannie Mae, the biggest buyer of Countrywide’s mortgages, say people familiar with the matter.

One was James Johnson, a longtime Democratic Party power and an adviser to Sen. Barack Obama’s campaign, who this past week was named to a panel that is vetting running-mate possibilities for the presumed nominee.

As Blogging Stocks so eloquently put it:

Since Countrywide had business dealings with Fannie Mae, the whole deal looks a bit tawdry.

No one knows whether these loans will cause legal problems for any of the parties involved. But, it does, once again, raise the question of the wisdom of Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) buying a company with such an ugly past and so many chapters of less-than-ethical behavior.

Perhaps no one cares about the ethics part if there is money to be made.

Source [blownmortgage]

Blown Mortgage received a trusted tip this morning that banking giant HSBC closed 82 branches of Household Finance Corporation (HFC) and Beneficial . Both HSBC companies are players in the non-prime markets and specialize in mortgage refinancing and debt consolidation. Beneficial has also done it’s fair share of “personal loans” using a lien on title, which can show up as a 3rd mortgage on title reports.

HSBC has been pulling back by closing branches of HFC and Beneficial over the last several quarters and closed another one of its subprime lenders, Decision One (or D-1 as it was known, or D-Last as it was referred to in my company for their penchant for approving loan files that weren’t approved elsewhere) , back in September of 2007.

HSBC’s ownership in HFC and Beneficial have put it smack in the middle of the US housing meltdown. One top HSBC investor claimed that the company undervalued losses by $30 billion, after announcing first quarter losses of $3.2 billion in mortgage-related writedowns.

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Newsletters, Teva Pharm Indus ADR (TEVA), Stocks to Buy

“Analysts estimate the worldwide market for generics will increase from $75 billion to $125 billion by 2012,” says Michael Shulman.

In his ChangeWave Biotech Investor he states, “The key question for us is: Who is going to make the most money from these expirations? And the 800-pound gorilla in this market is our long-time holding, Teva Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: TEVA).

“Teva is the largest and best generics company in the world with $9.4 billion in sales in 2007 and the gap between it and its competitors is growing. Teva has 331 products on the market, 65% more than its closest competitor.

“More importantly, based on its business model of a mix of proprietary and generic drugs, the company’s operating margins are 10 points higher than competitors and that gap is widening. In fact, in the United States, the number of prescriptions filled with Teva generics is 50% more than its closest competitor.

“Be clear on this point: When it comes to generics, size does matter. The more a company sells, the more profit and cash it has available to do research and acquire more generics to add to its product list — and the beat goes on.

Continue reading Teva: The 800-pound gorilla of generics

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: International markets, Economic data, Politics, Oil, Recession

It has finally occurred to the Saudis that the world knows that they and their friends in OPEC are the cause of high oil prices.They like the money too much.

There have been theories that hedging and a weak dollar should take some of the blame for crude prices. But, the hedge people are being investigated by the federal authorities. That keeps them out of the market. And, the dollar is going up.

But, the price of oil is not going down.

The princes of Saudi Arabia admitted that they are part of the problem without coming right out and saying it. According to The New York Times, the kingdom will export an extra 500,000 barrels a day.”The move was seen as a sign that the Saudis are becoming increasingly nervous about both the political and economic effect of high oil prices,” the paper writes.

While their greed may have gotten the better of them, the Saudis would still like to have one or two friends around the world. It would be wise to have the US on that list.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: Pfizer (PFE), Merck and Co (MRK)

There is a report out of Reuters that may get the drug sector up in a whirlwind if it comes to pass. The implications aren’t just that Pfizer Inc. may want to try to counter Japanese drug maker Daiichi Sankyo’s bid for a majority stake in India’s largest generic drug maker Ranbaxy. Daaichi Sankyo has put in a bid of roughly $4.6 billion for that majority stake.

Pfizer is stuck along with Merck & Co. Inc. (NYSE: MRK) and other Big Pharma drug players between a rock and a hard place as it has a mountain of cash, makes money, but has a perceived weak drug pipeline. If you thought that Big Pharma drug companies were under fire because of generic drugs, the issues may get much more convoluted.

Ranbaxy is India’s largest generic drug maker, and India also has some restrictions on foreign ownership of its key companies and infrastructure. Whether or not the Pfizer deal comes to pass, it is becoming more and more inevitable that the big drug companies are going to have to either make more biotech buyouts to purchase better drug pipelines or that generic makers will become targets as a way to fend off the generic pressure. No wonder the short selling is lower in major biotechs.

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Yahoo! (YHOO), Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A), Anheuser-Busch Cos (BUD), Lehman Br Holdings (LEH)

While today’s index levels closed up in positive territory, that is only part of the story. The major equity index levels were far higher after the open today. Retail sales rose more than expected but the sell-off we saw earlier in oil did not hold and oil prices took the gas away from us. Fed governor Plosser’s comments about “rates need to rise” didn’t help matters. Below are today’s unofficial closing levels:

Anheuser-Busch Companies Inc. (NYSE: BUD) shares were up almost 5% by the final minutes of trading at $61.29 after InBev confirmed a $65.00 initial buyout offer for the beer giant last night. Interestingly enough, Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. (NYSE: BRK.A, BRK.B) will have pocketed several hundred million dollars on this if you see his current holdings.

Ethanol stocks were battered and tattered today after a key downgrade from Citi in the sector killed the stocks. The floods are part of the culprit, and Verasun Energy, Corp. (NYSE: VSE) was down over 10% to $4.75, a new 52-week low, in the final minutes today.

Charter Communications, Inc. (NASDAQ: CHTR) stock was down almost 3% in the final minutes today at $1.38 after it extended out the date for its dutch auction tender for its debt.

Invitrogen Corp. (NASDAQ: IVGN) saw shares get hit by over 10% to $38.81 after the company announced a highly leveraged acquisition of Applera’s Applied Biosystems (NYSE: ABI). Interestingly enough, Applera’s Celera Group (NYSE: CRA) was largely overlooked on this news.

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (NYSE: LEH) was a loser yet again with shares down 8% at $21.80 in today’s final minutes. The brokerage firm fired its COO and its CFO in a move to try to install confidence, but it ain’t working.

Yahoo! Inc. (NASDAQ: YHOO) might as well change its name to Uh-Oh! Inc. and Jerry Yang is looking so bad that we might want to bring Terry Semel back. The company’s buyout chances from Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT) are formally toast and history, and it is likely entering an ad-search deal with Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG). Yahoo! shares are down 11.6% at $23.11 in the final minutes today.

The real health of a nation is derived from a citizenry that is employed adequately. The debate over what “adequate” constitutes can be debated but it is sufficient to say that the way current national data is gathered for employment is simply inadequate. People are undercounted. Even with the report that was […]
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The real health of a nation is derived from a citizenry that is employed adequately. The debate over what “adequate” constitutes can be debated but it is sufficient to say that the way current national data is gathered for employment is simply inadequate. People are undercounted. Even with the report that was issued on Friday demonstrates a much more disturbing trend beside a rise in the unemployment rate. What we are seeing is higher paying jobs in professional, construction, and manufacturing being replaced by lower paying service fields. With wages remaining stagnant over the past decade, reduction in household income does not bode well for our nation but it only further cements a difficult time ahead for the housing market.

In past recessions, housing has always retracted and declined during these times because people logically do not make big purchases during tougher moments in the economy. A good indicator is looking at housing starts and their progressive declines months before official declaration of a recession:

houst_max_630_378.jpg

You’ll notice the typical pattern in the past but the last recession in 2001 set off a boom in housing which hasn’t been seen in the history of this nation. This has been the largest housing boom the world has ever seen in terms of money. As you’ll also notice in the chart, every previous recession aside from 2001 was preceded by a steep drop in housing starts. Take a look at the housing starts above. That constitutes a historic drop in time and trajectory. Yet even as we see the largest jump in employment in 2 decades, we are told that we are not in a recession:

“WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The sharp jump in the U.S. unemployment rate in May to its highest in 3-1/2 years is “too high for our liking” but represents slow growth, not a recession, White House spokesman Scott Stanzel said on Friday.

“This isn’t a report that we wanted to see today,” Stanzel told reporters after the Labor Department said the jobless rate rose to 5.5 percent last month from 5 percent in April, to its highest since October 2004.”

The problem of course is the method used by the government to calculate employment already understates real unemployment by 4 or 5 percent. Even within the recent report we are told that the unemployment rate is closer to 9.7 percent when we factor in those who have stopped looking for work and those that are underemployed working part-time. Clearly the numbers can be worse when we dig deeper into the data. And a state such as California is reflecting this reality.

Let us dig into the most recent unemployment numbers for California and separate out the counties to get a better sense of what is going on.

As of April 2008 the statewide unemployment number is 6.1 percent. Yet this number does not accurately reflect the actual pain certain regions are facing. There are many counties in the state that are facing a double whammy. First, they are facing the brunt of the housing crash. Second, their unemployment is increasing at an astronomical pace:

California Unemployment

What you’ll find in the above chart is California is not a balanced state. We have many counties that have 10 percent or higher unemployment rates. Some large counties like Fresno and Merced are facing that two hit punch I was talking about. Many of these areas have some of the nation’s highest foreclosure rates and it isn’t necessarily because housing prices are declining. These areas had higher unemployment rates to begin with but many of these places were also dependent on jobs that directly went up or down with the way the housing market responded. The cushion wasn’t strong enough and that is why we see tough times here. Let us quickly take a look at a Fresno snapshot to see what is happening in their housing market:

Median Price: $237,250

Last Year Median April 2008 price: $280,000

Drop of 15.27 percent

Given that certain areas in California are down 30 or even 40 percent, this may not seem so bad. But the problem is Fresno’s housing problems started much earlier than problems in areas like Orange and Los Angeles County. From peak they are down 30 to 40 percent. And looking back up at the employment chart, you’ll see that Los Angeles is at a rather healthy 5.7 percent but this has been rising rapidly recently. Expect higher foreclosures and unemployment in the near future. To put the 10 percent rate into perspective, the Inland Empire which has been hit so incredibly hard has unemployment at 6.8 percent:

Inland Empire

This 6.8 percent rate has caused the county to have a housing market that is in a free fall zone:

All homes Apr-07 Apr-08 % Chng
Riverside

$409,000

$295,000

-27.90%

San Bernardino

$370,000

$265,000

-28.40%

*April 2008 data: DQNews.com

This is why employment, at least in California, has everything to do with how deep housing will come down. After all what is the use of a home dropping from $1 million to $450,000 if you don’t have a job? This is a little discussed housing factor that’ll be making more headline news soon. The last few years the obsession with California housing was based on this phantom equity disappearing. It was more an academic exercise since if you weren’t planning on selling, what did it really matter? Well it does matter because people feel poorer when their perception of wealth is taking a hit. That was the last few years. Now, it isn’t only perception but it is full fledged reality. And this is what the stock market realized on Friday:

DOW

The stock market faced its biggest one day drop in over a year with the news that employment wasn’t as rosy as it should be; this forced the tough hot air blowing of the Fed earlier this week of maybe raising rates later on this year off the table. The subsequent drop in the dollar was further fueled by the European Central Bank doing the right thing and taking a strong stand with rates. Oil was the big story jumping a stunning $10+ in a single session, the largest ever on record!  Guess what that’ll do for folks thinking about buying in the Inland Empire and commute into Los Angeles or Orange County?  Unless they ride a Vespa, I wouldn’t expect many people to make this choice simply because they cannot afford it. All these things of course are tied into each other but it was simply a capitulation event reflecting reality.

Employment isn’t healthy. Our nation is in massive debt. Housing will not be recovering for a few years. This denial is absolutely stunning. In fact, CNBC on their website at the end of the day yesterday had a headline that read, “record drop in stocks. Great buying opportunity.” Sort of like the people that thought it was a great time to buy a home last year?

The California numbers have a lot to do with the state of the nation simply because of the size of our economy. Also employers such as WaMu, Wachovia, and Countrywide have branches in other states that employ thousands of people yet incredible amounts of their mortgage debt are tied to California. If housing continues to decline through the usually good summer season (we have June, July and August) then it will be a bloodbath for fall and winter. This is the time for housing to mount and build a buffer zone but looking at the hard numbers, where is this going to come from? Yes, Fannie and Freddie can raise caps to $729,000 but what use is it if people simply do not have the income to meet even modest underwriting requirements? Ed McMahon is having trouble paying his $4.8 million dollar loan to Countrywide so this isn’t simply a subprime issue. Slowly the reality is seeping in.

Be careful if you are deciding on jumping into the stock market or are looking at buying a home in the current environment. The best time to buy a home is in the winter when there is very little foot traffic (sort of like buying a car off a lot on a rainy day). Why would anyone rush into the market right now especially here in California?

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

Related Posts:
Would you Spend $1,000 a Month on Gas? Why Gas Prices are hurting the Inland Empire: A Case Study of Commuting.
California Budget Details: How the Recession Will Affect Revenues for the State.
Housing in Graphics and California $16 Billion in the Hole: The Genesis of the California Housing Market.
The Short End of the Stick: Examining Short Sales in Southern California
The Abyss is Deep: The Housing Abyss is Deep: 4 Major Reasons Why Housing in Southern California is Nowhere Near a Bottom.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

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