Archive for August 10th, 2008

Filed under: Earnings reports, Cisco Systems (CSCO), Exxon Mobil (XOM), Hansen Natural (HANS), Toyota Motor Corp. (TM), Archer-Daniels-Midland (ADM), General Mills (GIS), Polo Ralph Lauren’A’ (RL)

Here are some highlights from this past week’s earnings coverage from BloggingStocks:

Continue reading Earnings highlights: Toyota, Cisco, ADM, MGM, General Mills, Warner Music and others

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Via [bloggingstocks]

“Americans, while occasionally willing to be serfs, have always been obstinate about being peasantry.” - F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby was published in 1925 and chronicles the Jazz Age and captures some of the excess of the roaring 20s.  F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote the novel during a time in which there was booming […]
Related Posts:
Bank Failure: IndyMac Bank. Lessons from the Great Depression Part XIV. Bank Failures.
The Lords of Money Speak: Even the Prime Will Fall. Lessons From the Great Depression Part XV. The King JPMorgan Speaks.
The Sham of our Current Unemployment Rate Numbers: Lessons from the Great Depression: Part X. Data Mining.
The Day Housing Faced the Plague of Locusts: Lessons from The Great Depression Part XIII. Facing our Own Economic Pilgrimage.
Home Shopping Crisis Network: When the Ballyhoo Years Turn Into Relics of Excess. Lessons from the Great Depression Part XVI: Items That Sold in the Credit Bubble.

“Americans, while occasionally willing to be serfs, have always been obstinate about being peasantry.”
- F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby

The Great Gatsby was published in 1925 and chronicles the Jazz Age and captures some of the excess of the roaring 20s.  F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote the novel during a time in which there was booming economic prosperity and to a certain extent the novel idolizes riches and glamour yet throughout the book there is a slight discomfort of the unchecked materialism.  Even though it is now largely read by most Americans, this book was not popular during its initial publication or subsequent years.  A few years later, the Great Depression took hold and many of the themes in the novel simply did not apply to the large majority of Americans.  To talk about unrestrained prosperity during the 1930s was absurd.  After the Great Depression America had its mind preoccupied with World War II.  Only after these major events did this novel garner any large readership.

The idea of the nouveau riche is something that has always been a part of the American spirit.  Horatio Alger captured this by his popular rags to riches stories during the 19th century.  So this current era of economic boom is nothing new.  One of my real estate mentors once told me that, “you Californians have all hat and no cattle.  Everyone goes around pretending to own things with money they don’t make.”  This was a few years ago and those words ring loud and clear in what is going on today in our current economic collapse.

The idea of “ownership” has morphed in the last few decades.  Owning something became more about appearances rather than actually having complete possession of material objects.  There is one thing that highlights this point to perfection.  The auto lease.  Chrysler recently announced that through its financing arm that they will not be offering any additional leases:

“(WSJ) A week ago Chrysler LLC announced its financial arm would stop offering leases on new cars and trucks, effective Friday. For some dealers, the move has sparked a boomlet.

“It has been a frenzy,” said Paul Steel, who runs three dealerships in Michigan, including Southfield Chrysler Jeep outside Detroit. “Everyone is trying to get in now on a three-year lease hoping that Chrysler Financial will get back in the game by the time their lease is done.” Mr. Steel has kept his dealerships open until midnight every night since Monday, and he expects his staff will be working until at least 2 a.m. Friday to process all the orders.”

A friend of mine told me that leasing is a way of “hiding the cheese” of those that actually make a good sum of money.  With the current unforeseen spike in fuel prices the large truck market has come to a screeching halt.  Many dealers such as Chrysler, Ford, and GM are getting hammered by people bringing back their trucks from short leases and are finding no market for trucks.  In addition, the value of each leased truck that is brought back is costing them a sizable amount since it has depreciated significantly due to market conditions.  Housing isn’t the only thing that is crashing.  With many of these dealers cutting back, we will start seeing who really has the “cheese” and wealth.

This is part XVII in our Great Depression series:

12. Is the DOW now Tracking with the California Housing Market?

13. The Federal Reserve.

14. Bank Failures.

15. The King JPMorgan Speaks.

16.  Items That Sold in the Credit Bubble.

This phenomena isn’t only a California issue.  The entire automotive industry relied on this easy credit decade and played into the “all hat and no cattle” sociological trend.  The majority of people thought that by simply leasing a car too expensive for them to own that they somehow were wealthy.  What really was unfolding is the same thing as those that purchased homes with Pay Option ARM mortgages and had an artificially low rate.  The entire economy was built on people pretending that they actually owned artifacts of the wealthy when the reality of the situation was that their balance sheets were on the verge of becoming insolvent.

I’ve tried to understand the psychology of this and think that as a society, certain constraints were removed that allowed this excess to flow.  First, the idea of financial prudence was completely removed.  The “greed is good” mentality flowed unchecked.  After all, why do an honest hard day of work when you can get a $10,000 commission check for putting someone in a toxic mortgage?  Why would hedge funds on Wall Street want to invest in sustainable slow growth companies that add value when they can invest in CDOs and MBS that were yielding rates twice or even three times as much?  Instant gratification.  There was really no point in looking ten steps ahead when all the wealth was at your door knocking right now.

The media fed right into this.  It took two to tango.  The majority of those in society now labeled as “consumers” were fed by their opposite side the “producers” and all was well.  People wanted homes, we will build homes.  People wanted huge gas guzzlers, we will build huge gas guzzlers.  People want easy credit, we will give them easy credit.  The unchecked consumption is what we are now dealing with.  That is the problem.  All the solutions being thrown around somehow still have nostalgia for going back to this lifestyle.  We can’t even if we wanted to because we have reached the tipping point of maximum debt.  Take a look at our nation’s debt:

Total Public Debt

With the backstop to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac we have virtually guaranteed that the total Federal debt will surpass $10 trillion in the next few months.  As distressing as the above figure is, the American consumer has outdone the actual Federal government.  Take a look at household debt and liabilities:

Household debt

The American consumer is on the hook for $13.1 trillion in obligations.  This is for mortgage, auto, and consumer debt.  The majority of that debt is with mortgages.  Now the thing that is occurring is that the underlying assets like McMansions with uranium countertops and civilian tanks with spinning chrome rims are actually losing value as we speak.  The debt itself is still valued at the peak price.  Welcome to wealth destruction.  This is actually deflationary since each foreclosure and each leased truck being dropped off at the dealer is forcing someone to take a loss.  The higher prices with fuel and groceries is simply a reflection of our declining dollar.

Given that a large number of people never could really afford a $60,000 SUV or a $600,000 home, prices simply by the law of economics are going to have to come down.  They already are.  This is how the free market should work.  These items are now being valued at their true market rates and not under the decade long Ponzi scheme where the new economic paradigm was, “trade up because it will always go up in value.”  Even with the new FHA guidelines people are now going to have to show their actual income and not their brokers made up $250,000 income from working at Target.  Those with the cheese, that is good credit and incomes to match, will be able to buy assets at vastly discounted prices.  The only reality is this group isn’t as large as many of these companies would like to believe.

Think this isn’t the case?  Here are a few examples of people looking to protect their hats:

“(Slate) Along with free trade and the SUV, another ’90s-era icon that seems to be dying is “casual dining.” The Bennigan’s and Steak and Ale chains closed down and will file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, “the latest casualties in the so-called casual dining sector, considered a cut above fast food,” as the NYT puts it. Technically, only the 150 or so corporate-owned branches-not the roughly equal number of franchisees-are immediately affected, “but the franchisees now find themselves owning a brand with no corporate cousins,” as the Dallas Morning News points out.”

Think Bennigan’s is the only one feeling the pinch?  How about a local popular chain P.F. Chang’s:

pfchangs

Over the last 5 years, the company is now down by 45%.  I’ve noticed this a couple times during lunch meetings and the foot traffic is demonstrably slower.  Or what about the ultimate resilient Starbucks?  Everyone needs their latte right?

starbucks

People are cutting back drastically because they have no other choice.  If anything, they are simply trying to realign their balance sheets and now that credit is much more restrictive, it is becoming rather apparent that their spending was all hat.  It is time to seek out the cattle if there is any left.  Yet it isn’t all bad news.  Too early to call a trend but some retailers are actually looking at Great Depression fashion:

“(NY Post) The duds say it all - and it’s depressing.

Taking a cue from the grim economy, this fall’s fashions at Banana Republic, Gap and H&M are featuring a distinctly Depression-era trend of cloche hats, pencil skirts, conductor caps and baggy, vintage-style dresses.

One of the most popular styles appears to hark back to the impish, newsboy getup of the 1930s: baggy trousers, caps, pinstriped vests, oxford lace-up shoes and utilitarian handbags.

“We associate the newsboy look with urban poverty - street kids of the 1930s,” said Daniel James Cole, a professor at the Fashion Institute of Technology.

“Given that we’re in an unstable economy and an uncertain political landscape, it’s possible that a retro style has come back as a way to connect with our heritage.”

Connect with our heritage?  How about connecting with reality.  Amazing that all this talk about recession and depression is happening during a stable time according to some politicians.  We’ve lost jobs for 7 months in a row:

Bls

That is the reality of the situation.  What we are learning is much of the cattle that we had was on a short-term lease and now we need to pony up if we want to continue that lifestyle.  Hard to continue funding conspicuous consumption when jobs are being lost.

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The All Hat and No Cattle Nation: Lessons from the Great Depression Part XVII: When Economic Times Cause and Economic Tipping Point.

Related Posts:
Bank Failure: IndyMac Bank. Lessons from the Great Depression Part XIV. Bank Failures.
The Lords of Money Speak: Even the Prime Will Fall. Lessons From the Great Depression Part XV. The King JPMorgan Speaks.
The Sham of our Current Unemployment Rate Numbers: Lessons from the Great Depression: Part X. Data Mining.
The Day Housing Faced the Plague of Locusts: Lessons from The Great Depression Part XIII. Facing our Own Economic Pilgrimage.
Home Shopping Crisis Network: When the Ballyhoo Years Turn Into Relics of Excess. Lessons from the Great Depression Part XVI: Items That Sold in the Credit Bubble.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

Filed under: Personal finance

This post is part of a series where personal finance expert Dan Solin looks at money moves that may seem smart in tough economic times, but are actually quite dumb. See all 12.

I know it is tempting. With gas at $4 a gallon and your SUV making frequent stops to fill up, the cost seems overwhelming. But does it really make sense to sell your gas guzzler and buy a new hybrid?

We have been led to believe that the greater the miles per gallon (MPG) of a car, the more we will save on gas.

However, a recent study by two professors at Duke University concludes that measuring fuel efficiency solely by MPG is misleading and inaccurate.

Look at these two examples. Which do you think will reduce energy costs and emissions the most:

1. You replace a car that gets 16 MPG with one than gets 20 MPG; or
2. You replace a car that gets 34 MPG with a hybrid that gets 50 MPG?

Continue reading Dumb Money Move No. 8: Sell your gas guzzler and buy a new hybrid

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: Personal finance

This post is part of a series where personal finance expert Dan Solin looks at money moves that may seem smart in tough economic times, but are actually quite dumb. See all 12.

Is there a silver lining in the horrific number of home foreclosures we read about every day?

While having a home foreclosed must be traumatic for the homeowner, does it present an opportunity for investors and potential home buyers to pick up a bargain?

The answer may depend on the nature of the sale.

The classic scenario is the auction, where a home is literally auctioned off to the highest bidder, often right on the lawn in front of the house.

The basic problem with buying a home at auction is that you have no right to inspect the home and you have to pay the full purchase price by cash or bank check on the spot. There have been situations where buyers found serious problems with homes purchased in this manner, which would have been uncovered by a competent home inspector. Also, while not common, the homeowner may refuse to vacate the house. If so, you may be confronted with delays and significant legal fees to evict him.

Continue reading Dumb Money Move No. 10: Buy a home in foreclosure

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Apple Inc (AAPL), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Time Warner (TWX), Intel (INTC), International Business Machines (IBM), Nokia Corp. (NOK), Sprint Nextel Corp (S), Money and Finance Today, Whole Foods Market (WFMI), Oracle Corp (ORCL), News Corp’B’ (NWS), QUALCOMM Inc (QCOM)

In the News:

Filed under: SEC filings, Deals, Competitive strategy, Google (GOOG), Yahoo! (YHOO)

The SEC and regulators who have to look at the antitrust implications of Yahoo! (NASDAQ: YHOO) using Google’s (NASDAQ: GOOG) search advertising system should make the companies disclose the financial details of the deal.

But, the two companies are being allowed to cover-up those details in regulatory filings. The partnership, meant to allow Google text ads to run on Yahoo! search pages, should increase the portal company’s revenue. It will also create a near-monopoly in the industry because the two companies together have over 80% of the search market in the U.S.

According to Reuters, “Yahoo has said it expects to generate an additional $250 million to $450 million in additional cash flow in the first 12 months after the agreement goes into effect.” But, those are estimates and are not based on the substance of the contract between the two companies that is currently being examined by the federal government.

The SEC has favored significant disclosure on almost all important corporate financial and operating information. It seems that Google and Yahoo! have dodged that.

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

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Nouriel Roubini, former White House economic advisor and most recently foreseer of the housing and credit bust has a great article in Barron’s where they dig in to his all-to-prescient forecasts of the economy.

Here is just a brief excerpt, but it’s more than worth the entire read.

From Barron’s (via Roubini’s blog RGE Monitor):

LIKE THE EXHORTATIONS OF JEREMIAH TO THE NATION OF Israel before the first temple’s destruction, the warnings of economist Nouriel Roubini fell on deaf ears. For the past two years Roubini, a professor at New York University, has cautioned about a huge housing bubble whose bursting would lead to a 20% drop in home prices; a collapse in subprime mortgages; a severe banking crisis and credit crunch; the near-failure of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac , and a U.S. recession of a magnitude not seen since the Great Depression. So far, this latter-day prophet of doom has been on the mark, though time will tell about the recession part.

What recourse will the taxpayer have?

The taxpayer’s bill is going to be huge. I estimate this financial crisis will lead to credit losses of at least $1 trillion and most likely closer to $2 trillion. When I made this analysis in February everybody thought I was a lunatic. But a few weeks later the International Monetary Fund came out with an estimate of $945 billion, Goldman Sachs (GS) estimated $1.1 trillion and UBS (UBS) $1 trillion. Hedge-fund manager John Paulson recently estimated the losses would be $1.3 trillion, and late last month Bridgewater Associates came up with an estimate of $1.6 trillion. So, at this point $1 trillion isn’t a ceiling, it’s a floor. And the banks, as I’ve said, have written down only about $300 billion of subprime debt.

How long will it take for the collapse in the banking sector to play out?

It is happening in real time. Many smaller banks are going bust already. More than 200 subprime-mortgage lenders have gone bust in the past year alone. And many community banks will go bankrupt. Community banks usually finance everything: the homes, the stores, the downtown, the commercial real estate, the shopping center. If you are in a town or a municipality where there is a housing bust, the bank is gone. Of three dozen or so medium-sized regional banks, a good third are in distress. That includes the Wachovias and Washington Mutuals of the world. Half of this group might go bankrupt. Even some of the majors could end up technically insolvent, though they might be deemed too big to fail.

Take Citigroup. In 1991 there was a small real-estate bust, though the quarterly fall in home prices was only 4%, based on the S&P/Case-Shiller indices. Citi was effectively bankrupt and signed a memorandum of understanding with the Fed that allowed the government to give the bank regulatory forbearance. Citi was allowed to ride it out and try to recapitalize in a few years, and thereby avoid bankruptcy protection. This time around the S&P/Case-Shiller indices indicate home prices already have fallen 18%. The decline could be as much as 30%, because the excess supply is huge.

Source [blownmortgage]

I’ve said numerous times that the main reason for bailing out the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac was not for the US homeowner but for the Chinese who have bought a huge portion of our mortgage backed debt.  By letting the GSEs go under the US government would have defaulted on a huge promise to its number one pimp partner who has helped fuel this massive expansion in credit and debt.

Bloomberg now has an article confirming that there were high-level talks between the US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, Fannie Mae CEO Mudd and Asian investors who hold a bulk of this debt.  When you think of the homeowner bail out, remember, $300 billion was earmarked for American citizens.  The rest of the near $2 trillion will go to securing our partners cash flow in to our country.

From Bloomberg:

Asian investors were among the most important groups to soothe because central banks, financial institutions and funds in the region own $800 billion of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s $5.2 trillion in debt, according to data compiled by the Treasury. U.S. officials were concerned that sales from the region would push lending rates higher, said the people, who declined to be named because the discussions were confidential.

At the height of the panic, Mudd dispatched two lieutenants to Asia to meet with debt investors. He declined to say which countries were visited, or the names of the officials.

`Extremely Worrisome’

Freddie and Fannie rely on foreign institutions. Investors and central banks outside the U.S. own about $1.3 trillion of Fannie and Freddie’s corporate and mortgage bonds, according to the Treasury. Chinese institutions are the biggest holders in Asia. European investors own $300 billion of the securities.

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Before the bell, Earnings reports, Deals, Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Yahoo! (YHOO), Apple Inc (AAPL), Time Warner (TWX), Market matters, American Express (AXP), Bank of America (BAC), Merck and Co (MRK), Genentech Inc (DNA), Hasbro Inc (HAS)

Stock futures were higher this morning after Bank of America joined recent financials and topped Wall Street estimates. Also pushing futures higher is a deal in the pharma sector with Roche bidding nearly $44 billion for the rest of Genentech. However, both Merck and Schering-Plough said they’ll postpone reporting their financial results after the close; Apple will also be reporting results then. Finally, oil prices came off a six-week low and are trading back above $130 a barrel due to escalating Middle East tensions. Higher oil prices could dampen the mood on the Street.

Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC), the biggest U.S. consumer bank and home lender, said profit fell 41% to $3.41 billion, or 72 cents a share, much better than analysts estimates of 21 cents according to Bloomberg. The bank curtailed loan losses, adding $2.2 billion to loan loss reserves. The bank has completed the purchase of Countrywide Financial Corp. on July 1. With these results, BAC joins other big banks that have recently reported better-than-expected results. BAC shares are up 8.6% in premarket trading.

Roche Holding on Monday said it was offering $43.7 billion to take over the remaining 44.1% shares of Genentech Inc. (NYSE: DNA) for $89 per share, 8.8% above DNA’s closing price Friday. DNA shares are up nearly 18% in premarket trading to $96.50.

Yahoo! Inc. (NASDAQ: YHOO) said Monday morning it settled its fight for control of the board with billionaire investor Carl Icahn. The board will expand to 11 members to include Icahn and the remaining two seats will be filled by the board upon the recommendation of its nominating and governance committee. In addition, Icahn, who owns about 5% on Yahoo common shares, agreed to withdraw his nominees for consideration at the annual meeting and to support the board’s nominees. YHOO shares are declining 2% in premarket trading.

Reporting today:

  • Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) is due to report after the close. The tech giant’s results will be closely watched after Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) have disappointed last week. Here’s a Bloomberg preview. AAPL shares are up 1% in premarket trading.
  • Meanwhile, Merck & Co., Inc. (NYSE: MRK) and Schering-Plough Corp. (NYSE: SGP) have pushed back reporting their financial results to after the close as well, saying they wanted to first publish research notes for a study of cholesterol medicine Simvastatin are released. According to First Call, analysts are looking for a profit of 83 cents on revenue of $6.05 billion. Merck preview.
  • American Express (NYSE: AXP) is also due to report after the close. Here’s Bloomberg preview.

Time Warner Inc. (NYSE: TWX)’s movie The Dark Knight, the sequel to 2005’s Batman Begins, made a record $155.3 million in its opening weekend for Warner Bros., while setting at least five other box-office records. Time Warner rose 0.3 percent to $14.70 on July 18.

Toymaker Hasbro (NYSE: HAS) says second-quarter profit rose to $37.5 million, or 25 cents per share and sales jumped 13.4% to $784.3 million on demand for brands such as Transformers, Littlest Pet Shop and Indiana Jones.

Analysts polled by Thomson Financial expected profit of 22 cents per share and sales of $675.4 million.

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