Archive for July 16th, 2008

The FDIC has halted the foreclosure process for all portfolio-held loans of IndyMac customers.  FDIC chairwoman Shelia Bair has been critical of banks and lenders for not doing enough to modify loans for customers in trouble.  There is no word on the specific changes the FDIC will make to IndyMac’s loan policy, but needless to say from the mouth of Bair they’re going to more aggressively attempt to modify delinquent loans instead of foreclosing.

So it begs the question.  If your mortgage is with a bank on the brink and you’re having trouble making your mortgage payments, are you hoping for a collapse?

From Reuters:

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp has temporarily halted any foreclosures on the $15 billion of bank-owned mortgage loans found in IndyMac’s portfolio, FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said on Monday.

Bair has scolded mortgage lenders for being too slow to help distressed borrowers restructure their home loans.

“Modified loans will be worth more than foreclosed loans,” she said in an interview on CNBC television.

Source [blownmortgage]

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been bouncing off the ropes for the past few days. Last week former St. Louis Federal Reserve President William Poole announced that the two behemoths of the mortgage market may actually be insolvent. This of course has thrown a major wrench into the $300 billion housing bailout […]
Related Posts:
Using Countrywide as an Example of Housing Excellence. Nothing Down and Banana Republic Loans Make a Comeback back by Government Sponsored Entities!
How Fannie met Freddie: The True Hollywood Story of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Real Homes of Genius: Today we Salute you Artesia. Half-off Sales Going on in Southern California. Federal Reserve new Pawnshop Function.
A Trip down the Housing Graveyard: The Casualties of the Housing Bear Market.
Wrong and Wronger: Compounding the Mortgage Mess with Bigger Mortgages.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been bouncing off the ropes for the past few days. Last week former St. Louis Federal Reserve President William Poole announced that the two behemoths of the mortgage market may actually be insolvent. This of course has thrown a major wrench into the $300 billion housing bailout proposal that is now in the government backburner since Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were going to be instrumental in helping the ailing housing market recover. Yet as it turns out, things are not so good at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Mr. Poole issued the following statement last week:

“(Reuters) Congress ought to recognize that these firms are insolvent, that it is allowing these firms to continue to exist as bastions of privilege, financed by the taxpayer,” Poole was quoted as saying in an interview held on Wednesday.

Chances are increasing that the government may need to bail out the two mortgage companies, Poole was quoted as saying.

Shares of the two companies have taken a beating recently on worries about whether they can withstand more losses and support housing as well as concerns that they may need to raise massive amounts of new capital.”

On Thursday July 10, Paulson came out saying the following:

“(Politico) For market discipline to be effective, market participants must not expect that lending from the Fed, or any other government support, is readily available,” Paulson said. “For market discipline to effectively constrain risk, financial institutions must be allowed to fail.

Apparently, one weekend in Washington D.C. is enough to do a complete about face because on Tuesday July 16, 2008 this is what Paulson had to say:

“I’m not here recommending putting taxpayer money into these institutions at this time. I am recommending we increase the backup facility temporarily to minimize the chance that the taxpayer will be involved,” he said. “If you have a squirt gun in your pocket, you may have to take it out,” he said. “But if you’ve got a bazooka in your pocket, you may not have to take it out.”

Bwahaha! Minimize the chance that the taxpayer will be involved? Don’t you love it when people use these qualifiers? You hear this all the time when people say, “don’t take this the wrong way (which of course you are), that dress/shirt/tie/hat makes you look like a moron.” Even though he isn’t recommending using taxpayer money right now, he wants to leave the door a tiny bit open just in case things go totally out of whack like having a rare event of a bank run occurring. Oh whoops, we already have that going on. In essence, they don’t know what the hell they are doing. In fact, it is the overall reality of the market that is carrying a bazooka and Paulson is coming to this fight with a squirt gun. Take a look at what has happened to Fannie Mae this month:

Fannie

We can also see the same performance with Freddie Mac:

Freddie Mac

The problem with this type of behavior, where one week you make a statement about letting institutions fail and then bailing them out sends a schizophrenic message to the market. Maybe he was talking about IndyMac Bank failing after the market had closed on Friday?

It has been a circus on Capitol Hill this week. The heart of the current proposal is that Paulson is requesting that Congress allow the Treasury to increase their credit line to the GSEs as well as providing the option of buying equity in the firms should that be necessary. Given the massive sell-off what do you think? While this eleventh hour proposal is being hashed out and awaiting Congressional approval, the Fed led by Ben Bernanke has given Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac access to the discount window. Of course accessing the discount window would completely erode any semblance of confidence in these two institutions so maybe they can just go to the Fed’s anonymous swap meet?

Paulson hasn’t been explicit about the amount this will end up costing taxpayers. That is left vague and frankly is the most troubling issue at hand. This is incredibly disturbing simply because of these following statistics:

Fannie Mae

Assets: $843 Billion

Liabilities: $804 Billion

Current Market Cap: $6.91 Billion

Freddie Mac

Assets: $802 Billion

Liabilities: $786 Billion

Current Market Cap: $3.47 Billion

Combined the two GSE’s own nearly half of the $12 trillion in mortgage debt outstanding in the United States. If you don’t think panic is starting to set in just look at the actions taken by SEC chairman Cox who is going after naked short selling. No, this isn’t a new age stock trading technique but apparently is another red herring to go chasing after:

“(BusinessWeek) While Paulson’s testimony was primarily devoted to explaining his proposals, Cox used the hearings to announce an emergency move aimed at further stabilizing the mortgage giants. The SEC chairman announced that the agency will limit the ability of traders to sell short the shares of the two GSEs, as well as brokerage firms including Lehman Brothers (LEH), Goldman Sachs (GS), Merrill Lynch (MER) and Morgan Stanley (MS). Critics have argued that excessive short-selling, in some cases fueled by rumors that traders know to be false, has driven the slide in shares of financial firms, including the defunct Bear Stearns.”

Going after this is like going after speculators in the oil markets. Yes, they do have an impact on the ultimate price but their overall ability to impact the price treads on the margins. This is simply to distract us from the stunning $5.3 trillion in mortgage debt Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have and also the stunningly low market cap in relation to their overall debt.  This action takes away from the overarching core issue that we are simply in way-too-much-freaking-debt! It also doesn’t help when your share price is doing this:

fnm-fre1.jpg

If these events were separated out, the IndyMac Bank failure and the potential bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, both stories would be fodder for an entire month. Yet they are happening simultaneously so there is simply so much information coming at us that is changing as quickly as the policy moves by our Treasury Secretary and Fed Chairman.  Fridays are going to be particularly fascinating after hours for the next few months since the FDIC likes to swoop in after the markets close on Friday to announce bank failures which we will have more of.

While the majority of politicians were throwing softballs at Ben Bernanke on Capitol Hill already expecting to pass anything without even bothering to read it, U.S. Senator Jim Bunning flat out called the Wizard of Oz out of his clothing:

“(CNN) The Fed wants more power, but the Fed has proven that it can’t be trusted with the power it has,” Bunning said. “… Maybe we should give them less to do, so they can get it right.”

The proposal is currently before Congress, and Bunning said he was ready to fight it.

“This one senator you’re talking to right now will do everything in his power to stop any additional powers that will go to the Federal Reserve,” Bunning said. “And I have a lot of means at my disposal.”

Bunning, a Hall of Fame pitcher, used a baseball analogy to take another swipe at the central bank.

“Giving the Fed more power is like giving the neighborhood kid who broke your window playing baseball in the street a bigger bat and thinking that will fix the problem,” Bunning said.

Bunning also was scornful of the Fed’s action to back a Bear Stearns rescue package.

As the nation’s then-fifth-largest investment bank teetered on the brink of bankruptcy, the Fed agreed to provide backing for up to $30 billion for a deal for JPMorgan to take over the troubled company.

Bunning also was critical of recent action by the Fed and the Treasury Department to come to the rescue of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. At the Senate hearing, Bunning said it was proof that “socialism is alive and well in America.”

The companies hold or guarantee more than $5 trillion in mortgages, almost half of the nation’s total.”

If you get a chance, you can look up the entire prepared comments by Senator Bunning for an excellent tongue-lashing of Boom Boom Bernanke and Golden Sachs boy Paulson. The only caveat that I would add is that “corporate” socialism is alive and well in the United States today. IndyMac can fail because after all, $18 billion of $19 billion in deposits are only to folks with $100,000 or less. Bear Stearns can’t fail because hedge funds with trillions of dollars would come under collateral risk and you wouldn’t want the bourgeoisie to lose money would you? The proletariat can run around and find that their U.S. Dollar is buying less, their bank failed, employment is less secure, and their investments are going down the drain. This is after all a mental recession since no official government data states we are in a recession!

The motivation to bailout Bear Stearns only a few short months ago was to avoid a financial meltdown. If bank failures and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac being down approximately 90% isn’t a financial meltdown, I’m not sure what is. If you think this circus of smoke and mirrors isn’t enough the Fed enacted this tough mortgage regulation which doesn’t even start until the fall of 2009 and only applies to the dwindling issuance of sub-prime loans:

-Verify Income (Do we really need this in writing? Apparently so)

-No penalty for early payments (aka prepayment penalties)

-Scrutinize ability of borrower to actually afford the mortgage (no more $720,000 homes for folks making $14,000 a year)

-Ban misleading advertising (you mean no more $500 a month payment for a $500,000 mortgage?)

-Push for escrow accounts (your payment looks nice when you don’t include monthly taxes and insurance)

My main argument here is why in the world are we waiting until fall of 2009 and why not enact this common sense legislation to all mortgage products today? In fact, if we are to nationalize Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and use them as the savior of the housing market you would expect that the above should hold true as well. This legislation is more hype than anything. The sub-prime debacle is running its course already. We have new challenges. IndyMac Bank proved that Alt-A loans are problematic and we have $500 billion in Pay Option ARMs that’ll start recasting this fall and winter in large numbers.

Pay Option ARM

This legislation is simply more smoke and mirrors. What about going after yield spreads for brokers where incentives were given to pushing consumers into riskier products? Why not make these rules standard for the GSEs since they now encompass 70% of all recent mortgages? These are easy to implement guidelines that make total sense. But when we have to have our Fed Chairmen put in writing that you need to verify someone’s income before giving them a loan, we have a bona fide problem on our hands and no squirt gun is going to fix that.

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Post from: Dr. Housing Bubble Blog

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Government Sponsored Entities Finding Their way Back Home with a Bailout.

Related Posts:
Using Countrywide as an Example of Housing Excellence. Nothing Down and Banana Republic Loans Make a Comeback back by Government Sponsored Entities!
How Fannie met Freddie: The True Hollywood Story of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Real Homes of Genius: Today we Salute you Artesia. Half-off Sales Going on in Southern California. Federal Reserve new Pawnshop Function.
A Trip down the Housing Graveyard: The Casualties of the Housing Bear Market.
Wrong and Wronger: Compounding the Mortgage Mess with Bigger Mortgages.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

Filed under: Google (GOOG), Anheuser-Busch Cos (BUD), Federal Natl Mtge (FNM), Washington Mutual (WM)

Today would be described as being choppy disappointment at best. The markets started out strong on a government bailout proposal for GSE’s but traders went right back to shorting financials on big gap ups. After today, we’ll get major earnings reports coming on a non-stop basis and tomorrow we’ll also start to see some key data around producer prices tomorrow morning. Here are today’s unofficial closing bell levels:
DJIA 11,052.10 (-48.44)
S&P500 1,228.02 (-11.46)
NASDAQ 2,212.87 (-26.21)
10YR T-Note 3.88% (-0.06%)
52-WEEK LOWS
TOP ANALYST UPGRADES
TOP ANALYST DOWNGRADES

Anheuser-Busch Companies, Inc. (NYSE: BUD) saw a gain as the company finally capitulated and agreed to be acquired now that InBev boosted its buyout offer price to $70.00 from $65.00.

Cardiome Pharma Corp. (NASDAQ: CRME) has released positive Phase IIb 90-day results for its oral Vernakalant for atrial fibrillation before the open today. Shares are responding with a significant rise on the report with a gain of 26% to $10.53 in today’s final minutes.

Despite Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) being initiated with a BUY rating at Deutsche Bank, shares of the internet search leader were down 2.6% at $519.93 in today’s final minutes of trading.

Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM) and Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE) saw a very wild day. Shares gapped up massively on the first inklings of a government bailout plan that doesn’t send shareholders to zero. But after traders got to analyze everything further, they sold shares off. In today’s final minutes of trading, shares of Fannie Mae were up almost 2% at $10.45 and Freddie Mac were actually down in negative territory by -0.65% at $7.70.

Rumors and selling continued to pressure many banking stocks. Washington Mutual Inc. (NYSE: WM) saw yet another large drop with shares down 29% at $3.48 in today’s final minutes.

Waste Management, Inc. (NYSE: WMI) is switching around the merger game. The company has announced today that it has made a proposal to Republic Services, Inc. (NYSE: RSG) to acquire Republic for $34.00 per common share in cash. Republic’s shares were up nearly 14% at $31.75 in late-afternoon trading.

The Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) has issued a statement today on the stability and solvency of the GSE’s in response to the unprecedented run on their stock prices as increasing turmoil in the housing market drives loan losses skyward.

From the OFHEO:

For Immediate Release


July 10, 2008

STATEMENT OF OFHEO DIRECTOR

JAMES B. LOCKHART

“OFHEO has been monitoring and continues to monitor closely Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the mortgage and financial markets.  As one would expect, we are carefully watching the Enterprises’ credit and capital positions.

As I have said before, they are adequately capitalized, holding capital well in excess of the OFHEO-directed requirement, which exceeds the statutory minimums. They have large liquidity portfolios, access to the debt market and over $1.5 trillion in unpledged assets.

At the time of our March 2008 capital agreement with the Enterprises I said: `OFHEO will remain vigilant in supervising the safe and sound operations of these companies, and will act quickly to address any deficiencies that may arise. Furthermore, we recognize the need to ensure that their capital levels are strong, protecting them from unforeseen risks as the market recovers.’

Including the $7.4 billion Fannie Mae raised in May in accordance with our March agreement, the Enterprises have raised over $20 billion in capital.  They are using it to continue to grow and to play a critical role in the mortgage markets, which we expect them to continue to do. To support their mission, Freddie Mac is committed to raising an additional $5.5 billion, which they will do given appropriate market conditions.  At a very difficult time in the market, the Enterprises have the flexibility and sound operations needed to support their mission.”


###

This all is a result of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae stocks getting taken to the woodshed.  Here’s a great clip of CNBC’s reaction to the stock tanking courtesty of Calculated Risk.  As the analyst says, how is Freddie Mac supposed to raise equity at $6 a share?

And as regular commenter Don asked - why would the government try to pass a bill to put more risk on these institutions?  A great question indeed unless you simply realize that the $300 billion bail out bill is really just a red herring to the massive trillion-dollar bail out that is in the works to save Fannie and Freddie.

Read more about the debacle and why the OFHEO statement is inaccurate here.

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Forecasts, Bad news, Consumer experience, Economic data, Oil, Recession

There were high hopes that Americans would run out and spend their tax rebate checks in a hurry, and that this would be just what the economy needed to get back on track. Well, it does seem that the checks were spent, but as weaker than expected June retail figures come in, it seems that it was a weak fix to a much bigger problem.

The program worked out pretty well in May, as retail sales grew 0.8% during the month, but we were sent back to reality today as June’s figures showed that retails sales in the month grew at a measly 0.1%. This was lower than the 0.4% that Wall Street analysts were expecting. Since these figures typically get re-adjusted, it is not out of the question to assume that this figure could be even lower. May, for example, was originally reported to have had an increase of 1.0%, but that was lowered to 0.8%.

Once again, we have to assume that it is record high gasoline prices that are weighing on consumer’s minds, as the biggest declines came in automobiles, furniture, electronics and building materials. Auto sales of course were the biggest drag on the retail numbers, and if you look at the figures while ignoring auto sales, then retail would have actually risen by 0.8%, but that is still under the 1.0% that analysts were predicting.

Continue reading June retail sales indicate rebate boost is fading

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: Management, Lehman Br Holdings (LEH)

Lehman Bros. (NYSE: LEH), the once-proud investment banking firm that’s seen its stock tumble from $74 to under $13 in the past year, has a solution to its problems: bring back the investor relations person who was the company’s mouthpiece back when investors didn’t know about the huge unchecked risks Lehman was taking.

Shaun Butler had run investors relations for the company since it went public in 1994 before retiring at the beginning of February, according (subscription required) to The Wall Street Journal.

It’s not a material change, and there’s probably nothing much to be read into it. Lehman is reportedly not in desperate need of more cash (although they also said that about Bear Stearns) and is considering a share buyback to boost its stock price. The company appears to see its problems as more perception related than operational, and obviously believes that bringing back a familiar face and voice will ease investors’ nerves.

MarketWatch
has reported that the company is unlikely to be able to find a buyer because most banks have their own issues to deal with. So it looks like Lehman will have to win back the street on its own.

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: Products and services, Google (GOOG)

When Tom talked about Google, Inc.’s (NASDAQ: GOOG) failure to properly monetize YouTube, he questioned if Google’s purchase of the world’s largest video-sharing site was a mistake. In relative terms, Google’s use of stock to purchase YouTube was a short-term impact more than anything. But he’s right — YouTube still has not found a secret sauce to monetize the huge amount of video traffic being sent to and viewed from the site every second of the day.

What has taken Google two years to figure out here? YouTube has been a playground for testing different online video monetization methods, but none of them have really worked. YouTube started out as a grassroots video-sharing site, and as its customer base has grown, it’s one area where ads continually have been shunned by its viewers. So, Google may be giving up and going to a traditional method of selling advertising on YouTube: the pre-roll and post-roll ad video clip.

This model has been used on news websites and most other types of video sites with success. It’s a model that works. Plug in a 10-second or 15-second video in front of (and following) a customer-requested video clip and that advertising model works. Publishers have to keep them short (10 seconds is optimal), of course. So far, Google has shunned this kind of traditional video advertising on YouTube. But, as the Wall Street Journal reported this week, it may be ready to forge ahead with this model. It needs to get a respectable amount of revenue from YouTube somehow, because now, it’s not.

Filed under: Forecasts, Procter and Gamble (PG), Kimberly-Clark (KMB)

Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) wants to calm the nerves of jittery Wall Street. According to this item, the Kimberly-Clark (NYSE: KMB) warning has spooked investors worried about inflation (I’m one of them). So, P&G wanted to let everyone know that things will be all right at the maker of Ivory soap and Pringles potato chips (or is that crisps?).

P&G is confident that it can deliver top-line growth of between 8% and 10% when it next reports. Also, management believes that earnings per share will still be somewhere between $0.76 and $0.78. You know it’s a bad market when an announcement indicating that the status quo will merely be maintained as opposed to being exceeded is enough to keep a stock slightly in the green by a few pennies, as opposed to down nearly 5% (which is how the stocks of P&G and Kimberly-Clark are trading, respectively, as of this writing).

Of course, the fact that P&G came out and supported its guidance doesn’t mean that inflation shouldn’t be feared. We’re still in bad shape in this regard, the bears haven’t gone away, and I don’t think either P&G or Kimberly-Clark are trading buys. I like both for the longer-term, and in terms of Kimberly-Clark, the yield is attractive. However, in terms of buy-and-hold-and-forget, you can’t beat the safe reliability of P&G, whose product portfolio is one of the best out there in the consumer sector. I would imagine that P&G’s brand equity is helping it navigate this vicious commodity storm, but don’t think it can’t weaken in coming quarters.

Disclosure: I don’t own any stock mentioned; positions can change at any time.

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: International markets, Forecasts, Commodities, Oil, Federal Reserve, Recession

Oil plunged more than $8 to about $136 Tuesday at mid-day after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke’s indicated the risks to U.S. growth have increased as a result of credit market losses, Bloomberg News reported Tuesday.

Oil fell $9.26 to $135.92 per barrel before recovery slightly. Oil hit a record of $147.27 per barrel on July 11.

The other major energy commodities, likewise, plummeted on the news. Heating oil plunged almost 15 cents to $3.91 per gallon, unleaded gasoline sank almost 17 cents to $3.39 per gallon, and natural gas plunged 44 cents to $11.51 per million BTUs.

“Oil in free-fall”

Energy trader Jim Dietz said “a mini selling frenzy” hit the oil market after Bernanke indicated the U.S. economy was likely to slow further.

“We did have some support for an oil-long trade earlier as an investment when few other investments are working, but that sentiment was quickly wiped out by Bernanke’s comments,” Dietz said. “We had oil in free-fall for about an hour. The market put ‘two and two together.’ We had the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bailout news yesterday [Monday] and Bernanke’s bearish comments today. That led a lot of people to conclude we’re going to see a slowdown in oil demand growth, which means lower prices.”

Continue reading Oil plunges $8 to $136 on fear of deeper U.S. recession

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