Archive for September 11th, 2008

Please join me in welcoming Debbie L. Sklar to the editorial staff at Blown Mortgage.  She’s going to be writing a couple of articles a week for us here as we work to bring you ever-improving content.  I’ll let Debbie introduce herself with her first post below:

“Mortgage Mania” — this is a term that is often used when describing the craziness that has taken the country by storm thanks to those in the mortgage business. I have a few choice other phrases to describe my own personal feelings, however, they aren’t quite appropriate for an open blog.  

While some say they feel sorry for those mortgage lenders, brokers, loan officers, etc., I can’t say that I do – at all.

Living in California for the past 10 years, I have somewhat learned to “go with the laid back California attitude,” but I still maintain many of my Midwestern values. What does that mean? Well, that I try to maintain and abide by a strong work ethics. So, it is hard for me to feel sorry for an entire industry – an industry that has indeed thrown homeowners across the country into a tailspin.

Just in Southern California alone the number of Notice of Defaults rose in July by leaps and bounds according to a report by DataQuick Research. I felt the pain personally after I received a notice from my landlord’s creditors stating that he and his wife had filed for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy.

What did that mean to me? Well, after three years of being the perfect tenant, never missing a month’s rent, and taking care of their home better than they did, I had to move quickly – like within a week to find a new home — before the bank showed up to tell me their home was going into foreclosure.

Apparently, Mr. Landlord’s own home, a big McMansion that he and his wife had purchased in 2005, had already been in default for quite some time.

Ok, sure, I wasn’t the first or the last to experience such a blow! And there is little doubt in my mind that this mortgage meltdown will continue and cause more heartache for homeowners from Coast to Coast.

In these posts, I am hoping to bring you, the reader, in layman’s terms, the latest info in this saga of never-ending rollercoaster events as we move into 2009. Many critics report that we won’t see the housing market pick up for awhile. Check out the report from Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson as reported back in May on money.cnn.com.

Well, let’s hope Paulson is way off base, and try to keep our fingers crossed that more Americans won’t lose their homes. Maybe we need to wipe out the entire mortgage industry – even though most have already closed their doors according to ml-implode.com – perhaps it’s time to start fresh? Just a thought. Stay tuned.

The writer, Debbie L. Sklar is a 20+year journalism veteran residing in Southern California, where she is a writer, columnist and editor for many local, regional and national publications. She will be a regular contributor to Blown Mortgage and may be reached via e-mail at DebbieSklar@cox.net.

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Products and services, Launches, Research in Motion (RIMM)

Research in Motion Ltd. (NASDAQ: RIMM) is finally deviating from the “candybar” wireless handset. Today, it introduced the first BlackBerry flip phone at the CTIA wireless trade show.

The new unit is called the BlackBerry Pearl Flip. RIM CEO Jim Balsille stated that 70% of handsets in the U.S. utilize the flip shape, which probably explains why RIM finally introduced one. It’s easy to see — there is no keypad to accidentally press and the nicer color displays are completely protected when the flip is closed on the phone. It took until late 2008 for RIM to realize this? Odd.

Aside from the outside color display, the new model is very similar to the existing BlackBerry Pearl model, with the same compressed keyboard and exclusive BlackBerry push-email that has made addicts out of email lovers everywhere.

The original Pearl, which debuted two years ago, was RIM’s first foray into the consumer market, and this new model should sell like gangbusters to that same crowd. In retrospect, RIM’s strategy was probably to release a consumer flip phone to re-energize interest in its BlackBerry line with so much competition arriving lately from the iPhone 3G and other smartphones that do email and provide business-like features in a cellphone form factor. The new BlackBerry Pearl Flip will be seen in T-Mobile USA stores sometime this fall.

 

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Filed under: Apple Inc (AAPL), Motorola (MOT), Nokia Corp. (NOK), Research in Motion (RIMM)

Minyanville contributor Sean Udall dares to share the kind of keen insight and actionable information you won’t find in any prospectus. For more original thought, visit www.minyanville.com.

As Brian White noted earlier, Research in Motion (ASDAQ: RIMM) plans to enter the retail market this fall with a clamshell flip version of its BlackBerry Pearl smartphone.

The BlackBerry Pearl Flip 8220 offers multimedia features such as a video and music player and a 2-megapixel camera. Like the original Pearl, the new flip model includes a Web browser and a SureType Qwerty keyboard. The new device weighs 3.6 ounces and measures about 3.9 inches by 1.9 inches by 0.7 inches. BlackBerry says the Pearl Flip offers voice activated dialing, conference calling, speed dialing, call forwarding and background noise cancellation.

“The popularity of BlackBerry smartphones has grown tremendously around the world and the introduction of this new flip phone will help extend the reach of the BlackBerry platform even further,” Mike Lazaridis, president and co-CEO of Research In Motion, said in a prepared statement. “The BlackBerry Pearl Flip is a full-featured smartphone.”

BlackBerry’s effort to expand beyond its business base to retail consumers puts the company in direct competition with Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) iPhone and industry stalwarts Motorola (NYSE: MOT), a pioneer of the flip phone, Samsung, which isn’t publicly traded in the US, and Nokia (NYSE: NOK).

T-Mobile will be the exclusive stateside launch carrier of the new flip BlackBerry. Pricing details weren’t released and will be available later.

 

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The spin is out in full force folks. The Southern California housing numbers are now out and once again they show a dismal and pathetic market. Yet even in the face of falling prices ala the Wal-Mart commercials, you can rest assured that some are going to spin the data for all it […]
Related Posts:
Foreclosures? Housing Bubble? In Southern California? Impossible!
Real Homes of Genius: Today we Salute you Compton. Once, Twice, Three times a Short Sale.
Emerging Economic Trends: Housing Swaps, Frugality, and Selling Homes in Lower Priced Areas.
C.A.R. says 2007 will see a -2% Drop in California. Does This Feel like a 2% Yearly Drop?
Doing The Housing Bubble Math Dance for California.

The spin is out in full force folks. The Southern California housing numbers are now out and once again they show a dismal and pathetic market. Yet even in the face of falling prices ala the Wal-Mart commercials, you can rest assured that some are going to spin the data for all it is worth. You also need to remember that the recent data on Southern California is for the month of July, a historically strong month simply because of seasonal factors. In addition, the month of August should look similar to this month but expect the report for September due out in October to show the actual pay option ARM smack down.

But even with seasonality the spinsters are going to use the current minor bump in home sales as a major positive:

“(DQNews) La Jolla, CA—The number of Southern California homes sold last month edged up to its highest level in more than a year as bargain hunters swept up foreclosure properties in affordable neighborhoods, a real estate information service reported.

A total of 20,329 new and resale houses and condos sold in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties last month. That was up 16.7 percent from 17,424 the previous month and up 13.8 percent from 17,867 for July a year ago, according to San Diego-based MDA DataQuick.

Last month’s sales count was the highest since 21,856 homes were sold in March 2007, though it still fell 23 percent short of the average July sales total since 1988, when MDA DataQuick’s statistics begin. From last September through June, sales for each month were at an all-time low for that particular calendar month, with the exception of April which was the next lowest. Last month’s sales total was the first since September 2005 to rise above the year-ago level.”

Bargain hunters? Foreclosures in affordable neighborhoods? Isn’t that an oxymoron? If the neighborhood was affordable in the first place you wouldn’t be seeing large number of foreclosures but that is an entirely different subject. Even though this report is trying to spin the 21,856 sales as a significant jump it is nowhere close to the sales that occurred during the bubble frenzy. Take a look at this data:

July 2004: 32,988

July 2005: 31,069

July 2006: 25,628

July 2007: 17,867

July 2008: 20,329

It helps to put things in perspective doesn’t it? Of course they aren’t going to say that sales for Southern California are off by 38% from their peak July month only a few years ago. And when they say that the jump was bolstered by “affordable neighborhoods” what they mean is that the majority of the sales were fueled by the Inland Empire were homes are being sold for whatever the market will take. Let us look at the details of the report:

Southern california housing

I first direct your attention to the stunning jump in sales for Riverside and San Bernardino Counties. These two counties make up the Inland Empire. But what the report doesn’t highlight is the actual median price of both these counties. They are now down 34 and 35 percent on a year over year basis and carry a median price of $260,000 and $230,000. Do you realize that Riverside County for example hit a high median price of $432,000 in December of 2006? So if we take that peak price to the current median price we get:

$430,000 - $260,000 = $170,000 (A 39% Discount)

Los Angeles County hit a peak of $550,000 and is now at $400,000. Nice $150,000 discount. Orange County? Orange County had a median price of $645,000 in June of 2007. That is a drop of $184,000 in one year. Would you wait a year for $184,000? I think most would.

Across the board prices are getting hammered. The reason sales jumped last month was in large part to the big jump in the Inland Empire. And of course homes are now selling for 50 to 60 percent off peak sales prices. To think this won’t happen in Los Angeles County and Orange County is simply unrealistic. It will happen. Just wait until the pay option ARM loans in these areas hit their anniversary dates.

You’ll love some of the reasons given for the fall off in prices:

“What we’re looking at is a fire sale of properties in newer affordable neighborhoods that were bought or refinanced near the price peak with lousy mortgages. What we’re still not seeing is this level of distress spreading to more expensive or established neighborhoods,” said John Walsh, MDA DataQuick president.

The median price paid for a Southland home was $348,000 last month, down 2.0 percent from $355,000 in June and down 31.1 percent from $505,000 for July 2007. That peak of $505,000 was reached in March, April, May and July of last year.

The median has fallen because of depreciation, especially in inland markets, and because of the steep drop off in home financing in the so-called jumbo category, which until recently was defined as loans above $417,000.

Before the credit crunch hit in August 2007, nearly 40 percent of Southland sales were financed with jumbo loans. Jumbos last month accounted for 15.8 percent of Southland sales.”

First, what qualifies as a more established neighborhood? Are we talking about Malibu or Newport Coast? Sure, those areas are positive but only a fraction of the entire 20,000,000+ people that live in Southern California live there. That reminds me of something said during the Crash of 1929. Mr. Rockefeller during the crash of the Great Depression announced that he was buying stocks while everyone was selling. To paraphrase a market observer, “of course he is buying. He’s the only one left with money.” Well of course these areas are doing fine! They always do well irrespective of the economy. Yet I draw your attention to the chart above again. Every single county is down from 26.9% to 35.2%. That is a major correction in one year and we are yet to see the truly “lousy” mortgages hit the actual market.

Another interesting part of the report is the implication that jumbo loans are somehow hurting the market. Did you look at the overall Southern California median price? It’s at $348,000! You don’t need a stinking jumbo loan anymore. What you need is good credit and a solid income to buy a home and not some banana republic mortgage from the bubble days. Given that our unemployment rate is at 7.3% who really wants to buy a home when their income is at risk? You think those 200,000 state workers are hungry to buy a home given that Arnold is trying to cut them down to the minimum wage? What about all the jobs in housing that are now no longer bringing in good paychecks? If you connect the dots prices are going down because the entire state was turned into a housing casino and mortgages were used as chips.

I recall clearly a few months ago hearing on the radio here in Southern California, these permabull brokers talking about how great the Hope Now program would be for buyers. When this failed, it was going to be the fantastic Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bailout. Well of course all these idiotic programs failed because they missed one simple yet obvious fact. The economy is in distress! This is like offering lobster to a person with no taste buds. Or offering someone that lives in Palm Springs an Eskimo jacket. They don’t need gimmicks. What we need is for the state to get its budget in order and not offer tax breaks for subprime lenders. We need an infrastructure that is sustainable and not one built around finance, insurance, and real estate. Did people really think that we were going to trade homes to one another ad infinitum? Sure makes that $729,500 loan limit seem like an absolute boneheaded move.

I was going through some of the historical “help” that was going to save the market and have compiled a list here for your mental historical note keeping:

Bailout matrix

Of course these programs are all failing because they fail to address the structural problems of the system. That is, this was a bubble of epic proportions and the only way to sustain it is to bring back the toxic credit that fueled the market. I was digging through some images I have saved and found this screenshot of Hank Paulson on CNN from December of 2007:

cnn-subprime-helpontheway-december.png

Subprime help is indeed on the way. On the way out the door that is.

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Southern California Housing Report: New Housing Motto: Foreclosure Data is so Bad, it has to be Good! Median Price Down 31% to $348,000.

Related Posts:
Foreclosures? Housing Bubble? In Southern California? Impossible!
Real Homes of Genius: Today we Salute you Compton. Once, Twice, Three times a Short Sale.
Emerging Economic Trends: Housing Swaps, Frugality, and Selling Homes in Lower Priced Areas.
C.A.R. says 2007 will see a -2% Drop in California. Does This Feel like a 2% Yearly Drop?
Doing The Housing Bubble Math Dance for California.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

Washington Mutual forced out it’s CEO yesterday as losses tied to mortgage and credit card delinquencies continued to hurt the bank.  Washington Mutual is a story that everyone needs to keep their eye on.  We’ve been reporting for nearly a year that Washington Mutual has been one of the most under-discussed potential timebombs of the US banking system.  Consider the following:

These are what one might call 3-strikes.  And now the CEO is out.  Let’s see how much longer the company operates before slipping in to receivership.

From The New York Times:

Mr. Killinger is the latest chief executive in the financial services industry to lose his job as the credit crisis has worsened. Earlier on Sunday, the heads of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were forced out after the Treasury Department orchestrated a takeover of the companies. The chief executives of CitigroupMerrill LynchWachovia and Bear Stearnshave also been dismissed as losses mounted.

Washington Mutual, based in Seattle, has been one of the lenders hit hardest by the downturn in the housing market. It has one of the biggest portfolios of so-called pay option mortgages, and had long focused its operations on lower-income urban borrowers. Losses at the bank have been devastating.

There appears to be no quick fix to its troubles. In April, Mr. Killinger turned to TPG and several other private equity investors after it became clear that the bank needed capital. The deal allowed Mr. Killinger to keep his job, but many analysts said the bank would need another infusion. JPMorgan had previously submitted a bid that would have led to his ouster.

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Apple Inc (AAPL), Motorola (MOT), Nokia Corp. (NOK), Research in Motion (RIMM)

Minyanville contributor Sean Udall dares to share the kind of keen insight and actionable information you won’t find in any prospectus. For more original thought, visit www.minyanville.com.

As Brian White noted earlier, Research in Motion (ASDAQ: RIMM) plans to enter the retail market this fall with a clamshell flip version of its BlackBerry Pearl smartphone.

The BlackBerry Pearl Flip 8220 offers multimedia features such as a video and music player and a 2-megapixel camera. Like the original Pearl, the new flip model includes a Web browser and a SureType Qwerty keyboard. The new device weighs 3.6 ounces and measures about 3.9 inches by 1.9 inches by 0.7 inches. BlackBerry says the Pearl Flip offers voice activated dialing, conference calling, speed dialing, call forwarding and background noise cancellation.

“The popularity of BlackBerry smartphones has grown tremendously around the world and the introduction of this new flip phone will help extend the reach of the BlackBerry platform even further,” Mike Lazaridis, president and co-CEO of Research In Motion, said in a prepared statement. “The BlackBerry Pearl Flip is a full-featured smartphone.”

BlackBerry’s effort to expand beyond its business base to retail consumers puts the company in direct competition with Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) iPhone and industry stalwarts Motorola (NYSE: MOT), a pioneer of the flip phone, Samsung, which isn’t publicly traded in the US, and Nokia (NYSE: NOK).

T-Mobile will be the exclusive stateside launch carrier of the new flip BlackBerry. Pricing details weren’t released and will be available later.

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Filed under: Management, Apple Inc (AAPL)

Back in June, pancreatic cancer survivor and Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) CEO Steve Jobs appeared at a conference appearing excessively thin and out of it, spurring rumors that Jobs was sick, possibly with another occurrence of cancer.

Joe Nocera reports that Jobs is now blaming the rumors on “hedge funds with a big short position in Apple.”

Color me unconvinced. When a high-profile cancer survivor appears gaunt and sickly, there is no need for a nefarious conspiracy to spur questions about his health. Nocera has an interesting theory: “I think he likes having half the world wondering about his health. I think he likes the fact that Bloomberg accidentally put his obituary on the Web. It’s a lovely reminder about just how important he is in the culture. It means half the world is spending time thinking about, well, him. Far more than anyone in hedge fund land, he himself was most responsible for the rumors, by acting so absurdly secretive. His narcissism isn’t pretty, but it sure is effective.”

Continue reading Steve Jobs blames cancer rumors on hedge funds!

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