Archive for July 8th, 2008

Filed under: Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Alcatel-LucentADS (ALU), Teva Pharm Indus ADR (TEVA)

MOST NOTEWORTHY: NCR Corp, Medivation and Teva Pharma were today’s noteworthy upgrades:

  • Baird upgraded NCR Corp (NYSE: NCR) to Outperform from Neutral following its North American ATM managers survey that indicates a solid ATM environment and opportunity for margin improvement.
  • Rodman & Renshaw upgraded Medivation (NASDAQ: MDVN) to Outperform from Market Perform citing valuation of the firm’s pipeline given recent catalyst of positive Phase II results in Huntington’s disease with lead candidate, Dimebon.
  • Goldman added Teva Pharma (NASDAQ: TEVA) to its Conviction Buy List citing valuation, upcoming catalysts, and defensive characteristics.

OTHER UPGRADES:

  • Marsh & McLennan (NYSE: MMC) was raised to Buy from Hold at Citigroup.
  • RBC lifted Bankrate (NASDAQ: RATE) to Outperform from Sector Perform.
  • Alcatel-Lucent (NYSE: ALU) was upgraded at WestLB to Hold from Sell.

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Filed under: Deals, Internet, Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Yahoo! (YHOO), Technology, NASDAQ

Yahoo’s (NASDAQ: YHOO) embattled management and board have one month left to prove to shareholders that they made the right call in rejecting Microsoft’s (NASDAQ:MSFT) bid. With shares trading at about $20, they are going to have to do some fancy footwork to show why rejecting a $31to $33 per share offer was actually good for shareholders.

Yahoo is trying to convince investors that a proposed ’search’ deal with Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) will provide the growth needed to restore Yahoo to previous glory. According to an AP report: ” By relying on Google’s superior technology to show some of the ads alongside its search results, Yahoo believes it can increase its annual revenue by about $800 million and generate another $250 million to $450 million in annual cash flow.”

Keep in mind that since the Microsoft deal fell apart, Yahoo has lost more than $16 billion in market cap. It is going to have to generate a lot more in revenues to show that they made the right choice.

My other problem is that I have many friends who over the last week have told me they can’t access their Yahoo mail or open up their saved stock portfolio’s on Yahoo Finance. I, personally, have been locked out for two days.

I have tried to follow the steps on their website, but all to no avail. Of course, I emailed customer service and still have yet to receive an answer as to why I am unable to log in. And, as I said, the same thing has happened to some of my friends. Has it happened to you?

If Yahoo is having trouble providing basic services to longtime users, how does it plan on generating another $16 billion in market cap for long-term investors?

Aaron Katsman is the lead Portfolio Manager and Managing Director of America Israel Investment Associates, LLC and Senior Editor of IsraelNewsletter.com. DISCLOSURE: Writer’s fund has no position in any stock mentioned, as of 7/01/08.

And I can’t rationalize it, quite.  Bank of America completed its controversial purchase of failed mortgage lender Countrywide.  The final purchase price came in at about $2.5 billion, down from the estimated $4 billion at the time of the announcement.  Questions about pending lawsuits, worthless home equity lines and exploding option ARMs all seemed to be answered to the satisfaction of BofA’s leadership to complete the purchase.

From the New York Times:

It’s official: Bank of America has acquired Countrywide Financial, marking the completion of an audacious rescue of one of the most troubled lenders in the United States. The deal will expand Bank of America’s reach in the mortgage business — but, in the current environment of rising defaults and delinquencies among American homeowners, the expansion obviously comes with serious risks.

Countrywide was among the largest lenders in California and Florida, two states hit especially hard by the housing downturn. Both states have sued Countrywide alleging it engaged in unfair and deceptive lending practices. What’s more, Countrywide has a big portfolio of home equity lines of credit, which some fear will be hit with a rash of defaults as borrowers run short of cash.

Some analysts had urged Bank of America to abandon the deal. And judging from the swings in Countrywide’s stock in the six months since the deal was announced, the markets have been questioning Bank of America’s commitment to buying it.

And yet Kenneth Lewis, Bank of America’s chief executive, pictured above, has been resolute that the purchase would go through.

Why didn’t Bank of America learn anything from Wachovia?

Why would Bank of America want all of those worthless Option ARMs?  Wachovia’s recent precedent-setting announcement that it’s waiving pre-pay fees on all Option ARMs implicitly confirms that those loans are a massive liability to the future of the bank.  And while Golden West/World Savings was a major originator of the exploding loans, there was none bigger than Countrywide.

Can Bank of America afford the loan loss reserves that will be needed to insure the risk of this acquired portfolio?  Will risk become too expensive moving forward?  Will it threaten the solvency of BofA?  Will they need to dilute shares, raise equity and cut dividends in the short-term to make it through the continued deterioration of the Countrywide-originated loans?

Bank of America is assuming that losses from Option ARMs, lawsuits and worthless HELOC’s will be far less than the long-term profiability of the combined unit.  That’s a big assumption and a tough one to make in a terrible economy.

Source [blownmortgage]

An important lesson for everyone to remember during all of this bailout mania is that higher risk still costs more money - no matter who is managing it - the government or private companies. From our friend Chris at Loan Officer Survival Guide (whose book you should have in your library) comes a stunning email that confirms this reality.

Citi has made huge pricing changes to their government products which make these supposed “affordabilty” products much more expensive. No matter how much Congress wants to make FHA bail out America the simple truths of risk management will continue to confound them.

Check out these pricing modifiers based on credit risk:

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: General Electric (GE)

General Electric Company (NYSE: GE) is scheduled to report second quarter earnings this Friday. Ten analysts that Zacks surveys expect GE to make 53 cents a share, the same as it did in 2007. Given that 0% growth rate, GE’s forward Price/Earnings ratio of 12.1 seems a bit on the high side.

But after the spanking that CEO Jeff Immelt took after missing in the first quarter by 13.7%, he could be guiding analysts lower only to surprise them on the upside. This makes me wonder whether analysts have a higher, whisper number in mind. GE stock is down 32% since Immelt took over on September 7, 2001, but with the exception of the first quarter, over the last five years GE has increased earnings at an 8.1% annual rate.

If it got back on that track in the second quarter, then investors would expect GE to earn 57 cents a share, instead of the official 53 cents. In that case, GE stock would fall unless it exceeded 57 cents a share. I have not been able to determine whether there is such a whisper number floating around Wall Street, but there’s no question in my mind that Immelt cannot afford to report a number less than 53 cents a share if he wants to keep his job.

Continue reading Can GE beat its whisper number?

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Filed under: Citigroup Inc. (C)

In the medical field, ultrasound imaging is extremely important. It’s effective with many parts of the body (and tissues); it’s real-time and cost-effective; and is portable. There is also no radiation exposure.

In fact, according to a report from InMedica, the market for ultrasound devices is expected to go from $4.4 billion in 2006 to $5.7 billion 2010.

Capitalizing on things, one of the fast-growing players in the space, ZONARE Medical Systems, has filed to go public.

The company’s core product — called the z.one ultrasound system — uses sophisticated data acquisition and image formation approaches (called Zone Sonography). Apparently, this is more effective than the traditional method, which involves line-by-line acquisition. What’s more, ZONARE has a portfolio of 32 US and foreign patents.

Continue reading ZONARE has an image of an IPO

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Unless you follow the housing market closely, you may think that not much in the housing market has changed. Yes, in January we already knew that the housing market was having problems but these last 6 months have added fuel to the flame. In January, the year over year drop for Southern California […]
Related Posts:
Foreclosed: Predicting Foreclosures in California. How Many Homes will Be Foreclosed in 2008?
Real Homes of Genius: Today we Salute you Huntington Park. Sold 3 Times in 4 Years.
Housing in Graphics and California $16 Billion in the Hole: The Genesis of the California Housing Market.
Housing Contradiction: Home Prices Down = Sales Up. Any Questions?
When $100,000 makes you Go Broke: The Invisible Hand Forces Americans Into Debt.

Unless you follow the housing market closely, you may think that not much in the housing market has changed. Yes, in January we already knew that the housing market was having problems but these last 6 months have added fuel to the flame. In January, the year over year drop for Southern California was 13.3% and the median price was $425,000. That may seem horrific and was a record but measure that with data 6 months later that now has the year over year drop at 26.7% and a median price of $370,000. The velocity of the drop intensified exponentially during this time frame.

We can also measure this against national price changes with looking at the Case-Shiller data. In January when the data was released, the most recent data indicated the following:

20 City Composite
November 2006: 204.65

November 2007: 188.98

Drop of: 7.6%

Now fast forward to the most recent data:

April of 2007: 200.53

April of 2008: 169.85

Drop of: 15.2%

The Case-Shiller data trails the market by two months. That is, the data released in late June covers the market until April of 2008. The data released in late July will go up to May of 2008. This is something to remember because even data from other sources is 45 to 60 days behind because the nature of closing a sale on a home is not instantaneous. From signing a contract, getting financing, inspection, appraisal, and to closing escrow does take sometime. It’ll be interesting to see if we even get a tiny jump when the May and June data is reflected in the current data. If we are to look at preliminary data like mortgage applications and also contracts, the above trend is most likely to continue.

The first half also witnessed interesting sales gimmicks like buy one get one free marketing ploys to entice buyers to jump into the market. The government during this time also engineered the first bailout for a Wall Street investment firm of Bear Stearns. It turns out that things were worse than they wanted us to believe. During this time we also saw the fascinating dance phenomenon take fire not on Dancing with the Stars but on the streets of America. People were learning the ease and flexibility of moonwalking away from your mortgage and responsibilities. Sometimes in life, you do get second chances and people realized that those on Wall Street shouldn’t have complete domain over speculation. Mary and John Doe realized that they too had some power in the market.

The first half of 2008 was only the beginning of a year that is going to prove to be a major turning point in our nation’s history.

Foreclosures

Nationwide Foreclosures

Once upon a time, foreclosures actually made headlines in the media. Now, it seems like there is this major fixation on oil and everything else is taking a backseat. Well guess what? During this time foreclosures as you can see from the above chart are still moving up. What is even more telling is that this is occurring while all these various measures are being launched at Wall Street to prop the market up. So what is happening? Wall Street is getting charity while the American people (see above chart) are not getting the trickle down from this supposed support.

The market is deteriorating and people are feeling the pinch while lenders and the government engineer lucrative bailouts. All you need to do is follow the data to realize that the façade being put up is to hide the corporate welfare being given to the purveyors of this once in a century bubble.

Foreclosures should be the headline story since much of the leverage of this decade was based on expanding housing. The fact that foreclosures are rising on such an alarming pace is only a leading indicator that more firms will be doing further write-downs in the months ahead. In fact the $391 billion in write-downs may be peanuts when we examine the potential $1 trillion target that we are predicting conservatively.

Major Price Declines

It must come as no surprise that prices are falling off a cliff both nationwide and in California. The reason California carries a lot of weight is that taken alone, California would be the world’s 8th largest economy. California is also the hub of the mortgage bubble. We earlier reported that prices in the golden state were off by 27 percent but have to update that since the C.A.R. recently came out saying the median price drop now stands at a stunning 35%! Given the $500 billion Option ARM implosion which will be one of the major stories in the second half, we can nearly predict the next few months.

Nationwide prices are down 15.2% which is the steepest drop ever. Even worse than the drop during the Great Depression because of the speed in which prices are correcting. What once seemed a mere impossibility, the forecasts for nationwide drops of 20 to 30 percent almost seem like foregone conclusions. We should be seeing 20 percent this year and if prices accelerate, who really knows. These forecasts were for bottoms in 2009 and 2010 at least if we are to look at futures markets but a 35% drop in California in one year is even shocking bears like myself. The ferocity of the correction is stunning.

And much of these price declines are because of the foreclosure onslaught. Last year, the struggle was that lenders simply did not want to lower prices. That stubbornness has led to massive amounts of inventory at a time when they should have aggressively pushed homes off their books. Now, REOs are flooding the market competing amongst each other at a time where the middle class American is being crushed by rising consumer costs and a gloomy job picture. Result? People are now more reluctant for big ticket purchases even if they qualified which many are not.


Stimulation Checks Out

In January, we reported that the Stimulation checks were going to be a waste of money and guess what? They were exactly that and put us into a bigger deficit:

“(January 2008) Don’t you just love how they are calling this fiscal boondoggle a stimulus package? Since we are all about “stimulating the consumer” they will also throw in a few syringes with heroine, methamphetamines, and two Red Bulls for good measure. This way, consumers can load themselves up and spend for 48 hours straight shopping without even pausing for water or sustenance (I guess the government assumes your lifetime goal is to be on the perpetual Wal-Mart hamster spending wheel). I can imagine everyone running to their mailboxes eagerly reaching in with their hands, on a bright sunny spring day and pulling out a nice $600 on a Statue of Liberty watermark check. Thanks Paulson! Just got screwed on the AMT and Social Security but hey, who can argue with a nice watermarked check?”

Well as it turns out, not paying attention to more important issues consumers were salivating to get their checks simply to offset the rise in consumer prices set off by the rise in energy. Not exactly the boost they were looking for. In fact, this put us further into debt putting more pressure on the dollar and also causing more inflationary pressure since more money went out competing for the same amount of goods. Unintended consequences folks! Now we are hearing more talk about a second round? Why not just send us all a $1 million and be done with it?

Black Gold Just Got More Expensive

Oil Prices

What has now become the number one economic story, oil is another major change that occurred during the first half of the year. Prices have jumped from $92.95 to the stunning $145 price per barrel. That is over a 50% jump in 6 months and is simply putting everything into a tailspin. With this move, airlines are struggling for survival, the American automakers are gasping for air, and consumer prices are skyrocketing:

US Automakers

How bad are things for the U.S. automakers? Toyota Motor Corporation has a market cap of $144 billion while GM now has a market cap of $5.7 billion. Toyota has a market cap 25 times larger than GM! That should tell you something about what is going on in the current scheme of things. They used to say, “As GM Goes, So Goes the Country” and if that mantra still holds true, we are in for some deep pain. I disagree with this mantra given that our country went from having a strong manufacturing base to becoming a service economy where we traded houses to one another and pushed archaic derivatives based on these houses to other investors. Basically we bet everything on the house and the house is collapsing.

Job Losses

Amazingly on Thursday we had a horrible jobs report but the market did not react. For the first half of the year, nearly half a million jobs were lost and previous data from older months was revised upward. Take a look:

BLS

Data from April

BLSNotice how the numbers were revised up? This happens routinely but when the numbers are revised to reflect a deteriorating economy plus you just reported that for the entire year, each month has had job losses you would think that this would make the market blink. Not so. Apparently job losses aren’t so bad according to the assistant Treasury secretary:

“(Washington Post) The assistant Treasury secretary for economic policy, Swagel came out for his monthly economic briefing yesterday, 90 minutes after the Labor Department reported that the country had shed jobs in June for the sixth straight month.

Does this mean the economy is worse than the Bush administration expected?

“We shouldn’t, in a sense, be surprised when the data are, are, soft,” Swagel managed to say.

Does the economy need another stimulus package?

“I-it seems, you know, it seems like that’s, that’s enough, uh, enough.”

What might trigger another round of economic stimulus?

“I don’t, I guess I don’t have an answer, I mean, you know, beyond saying we look at all the data and, um — so, my usual line.”

Okay, so it wasn’t a strong performance. But let’s cut Swagel some slack. He’s a sharp economist (his PhD is from Harvard) and, in ordinary conversation, he suffers none of the speech difficulties that plagued him on the stage yesterday. His various roles in government, at the Council of Economic Advisers, the Federal Reserve and the International Monetary Fund, were too junior for him to deserve any blame for the current economic troubles.”

This is actually becoming a comedy skit. How long can we keep telling Americans the economy is fine without being chased out of Washington with a revolution? I think what occurred on Thursday is indicative of what is going on in the nation overall. Exhaustion. People get that we are going in the wrong direction. Most understand the economy is bad. Like a bad movie, they simply want this thing to be over. But I have news for you. This won’t get better without you taking action. It can be something as small as choosing not to buy a home and playing into this lame game (which the government is going to try to entice with the new bailout plan giving buyers a one time tax deduction). It can also be voting out many of these idiots come November. It can also be you saving your money and not playing the consumption game which got us into this mess. Either way, there are things you can do. Yet it appears many are simply sticking their heads in the sand or zoning out in front of the tube. That will only get you more frustrated.

As you can see, much has happened in the first six months of the year. The second half will prove to be just as tumultuous and volatile. We have the option ARM implosion, the Presidential Election, the summer Olympics, and many other unintended consequences from fiscal mismanagement. Hopefully the All-Stars of the second half make wiser choices.

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

Related Posts:
Foreclosed: Predicting Foreclosures in California. How Many Homes will Be Foreclosed in 2008?
Real Homes of Genius: Today we Salute you Huntington Park. Sold 3 Times in 4 Years.
Housing in Graphics and California $16 Billion in the Hole: The Genesis of the California Housing Market.
Housing Contradiction: Home Prices Down = Sales Up. Any Questions?
When $100,000 makes you Go Broke: The Invisible Hand Forces Americans Into Debt.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

Filed under: Before the bell, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), Viacom (VIA), AMR Corp (AMR)

Before the bell: Futures mixed ahead of ECB, Jobs data; oil nears $146; NVDA plunges

AMR Corp. (NYSE: AMR), the parent of American Airlines, expects to record a non-cash charge of nearly $1.3 billion in the second quarter, the company said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The company also indicated it may cut nearly 7,000 jobs, or 8% of its workforce.

A federal judge in New York ruled Tuesday that Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) doesn’t have to turn over source code for the search function in its YouTube video service as part of an ongoing $1 billion copyright-infringement lawsuit filed by Viacom Inc. (NYSE: VIA), but it does have to turn over records of every video watched by YouTube users, including their login names and IP addresses, be turned over to the entertainment giant. If this doesn’t seem like a consumer privacy violation, I’m not sure what is.

Meanwhile, Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) is also encountering some law suits. This time CEO “Steve Jobs and other managers were accused in an investor lawsuit against the company of backdating stock-option awards to maximize their personal profit.” According to Bloomberg, Shareholder Martin Vogel and co-plaintiff Kenneth Mahoney said in the new complaint that Apple executives hid the cost of the backdated options from shareholders, leading the company to file false financial statements.

Filed under: Anheuser-Busch Cos (BUD)

With the markets in a swoon, marquee assets are on sale in the US. And, with the drop in the dollar, the valuations look even more compelling. Something else: the surge in commodities — especially in oil — is bulging the assets in mega sovereign wealth funds.

In fact, even US icons are under attack, such as Anheuser-Busch Companies Inc. (NYSE: BUD), which is fending off a hostile takeover from Belgium’s InBev.

True, there is some good news. For example, our domestic companies will have an edge with exports (it seems that this has saved us from a recession — at least so far). But, alas, it is little consolation.

Perhaps the most effective way to boost the value of the dollar is to increase interest rates. However, this will be a tough thing to do — in light of the upcoming election, the housing sump and continued economic weakness.

In other words, US assets should remain cheap. And, foreign buyers can’t ignore this. So, it’s a good bet that we’ll see more and more dealmaking from overseas.

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 MergerBook.com.

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