Archive for October 4th, 2008

Filed under: Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A), Politics

In an interview with Reuters, Senator John McCain mentioned Warren Buffett and former eBay (NASDAQ: EBAY) CEO Meg Whitman as possible choices to succeed Hank Paulson as Treasury secretary: “I think it would be someone that Americans would recognize that would inspire trust and confidence. There’s people like (Cisco chief executive) John Chambers, there’s people like Meg Whitman, there’s people like Warren Buffett.”

That certainly would be interesting as, in addition to being the greatest financial mind in the world ever, Buffett is also a hardcore Democrat and a supporter of Senator Barack Obama.

It’s also almost inconceivable that Buffett would leave Omaha and Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) to go wrestle pigs in Washington. Buffett’s pledge of substantially all of his fortune to the William and Melinda Gates Foundation demonstrates his commitment to charity and improving the world but there is nothing in Buffett’s history to indicate he would want to spend his days devoted to matters of public policy: he enjoys investing.

So why would McCain bring it up? He probably just wants to look more competent and open-minded on matters of economic policy — and name-dropping Buffett is easy because he knows nothing will ever come of it.

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: Ford Motor (F), Citigroup Inc. (C), Wachovia Corp (WB), Wells Fargo (WFC)

Today was a great day in anticipation of the bailout, up until the point that traders sold the news. There is still a fear of holding anything into the weekend where bad news comes in the form of takeunder mergers on Monday. Today’s jobless rate was 6.1% and the non-farm payrolls posted 9 consecutive declines.

Here are today’s unofficial closing bell levels:
DJIA 10,325.70 (-157.15; -1.50%)
NASDAQ 1,947.39 (-29.33; -1.48%)
S&P500 1,099.24 (-15.04; -1.35%)
10YR T-Note 3.644% (-0.002%)
52-Week Lows
Top Analyst Downgrades

The big news of the day was rather complicated. Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC) has decided to step in and merge with Wachovia Corp. (NYSE: WB) in an all stock transaction for the entire company. Wachovia closed up nearly 60% at $6.21 on over 250 million shares.

Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C) bit the dirt today. It is the potential loser in the Wells Fargo-Wachovia deal and it paid the big price today. Citigroup fell more than 18% to $18.35 on the news and it traded nearly 300 million shares.

Want to see what Warren Buffett said on bailout and bank mergers?

General Growth Properties Inc. (NYSE: GGP) got a a lift this morning on what many would otherwise consider bad news. The REIT has replaced its chief financial officer and suspended its dividend. Shares were up 27% at $9.70 right at the close today an more than 16 million shares.

Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F) fell almost 5% to $4.14 after it announced plans to sell up to $500 million worth of stock to buy back debt from its credit arm to help shore up its bottom line.

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Valleywag has the story on Honeywell CEO Dave Cote’s email to all 122,000 employees encouraging them to support the housing bail out.  Why you ask?  Because Honeywell, like many other large firms, leverage the short-term commercial paper market to manage cash flow and operation expenses.  This market has effectively stopped working and CEO’s like Cote (and GE’s Immelt) are hoping that they don’t have to tap credit lines to fund ops while the commercial paper market is frozen.  

Tapping credit lines would make investors nervous, putting pressure on their stock prices and increasing borrowing costs (a nice, little vicious cycle).

Of course you wouldn’t want to come right out with your ulterior motive, so instead make it a play for Main Street and hope your butt gets saved by the folks that are going to get screwed the most.

From Valleywag:

Why is Dave Cote telling Honeywell’s 122,000 employees to call Congress and ask them to vote for the $700 billion Wall Street bailout? The high-tech manufacturing giant makes its money far from Wall Street, on building electronics and airplane parts. But where the credit crisis hits the heartland the hardest is a market for what’s called commercial paper — short-term loans made to large corporations to fund their daily operations. It provides the cash that smoothes over the gaps between when supplies get bought and employees get paid and when customers pony up.

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Major movement, Deals, Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Options, Technical Analysis

HPQ logoHewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ - option chain) shares are falling today after the computer giant announced it has agreed to purchase LeftHand Networks, a small Colorado firm specializing in data storage. Companies are generally depressed when they make acquisitions, but often times an economic downturn offers a great opportunity to expand. If you think that the stock won’t fall by too much, then now could be a good time to look at a bullish hedged trade on HPQ.

HPQ opened this morning at $44.27. So far today the stock has hit a low of $41.95 and a high of $44.30. As of 12:10, HPQ is trading at $43.00, down $1.95 (4.4%). The chart for HPQ looks neutral and S&P gives HPQ a very positive 5 STARS (out of 5) strong buy ranking.

For a bullish hedged play on this stock, I would consider an October bull-put credit spread below the $37.50 range. A bull-put credit spread is an options position that combines the purchase and sale of put options to hedge risk in case the stock doesn’t do what you think but still leverage nice returns. For this particular trade, we will make a 5.3% return in just two weeks as long as HPQ is above $37.50 at October expiration. Hewlett-Packard would have to fall by more than 13% before we would start to lose money. Learn more about this type of trade here.

HPQ hasn’t been below $39.99 at all in the past year and has shown support around $41 recently.

Brent Archer is an options analyst and writer at Investors Observer.

DISCLOSURE: Mr. Archer owns and/or controls diversified portfolios of long and short stock and option positions that may include holdings in companies he writes about. At publication time, Brent controls a bullish hedged position in HPQ.

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Via [bloggingstocks]

What may be more amazing than one Olympian swimming for 8 gold medals is the continued revisionist delusion of our former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan.  Greenspan in typical revisionist fashion, is now stating publicly that the government should have allowed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac shareholders to be wiped out while breaking up the […]
Related Posts:
Housing Perception Foreclosing on Reality: The Fundamental Housing Attribution Error.
Parallel Universe: Housing Still Hurting on Main Street while Wall Street Celebrates.
The Abyss is Deep: The Housing Abyss is Deep: 4 Major Reasons Why Housing in Southern California is Nowhere Near a Bottom.
Foreclosure Nation: More Like Foreclosure States. 4 States Made up 50 Percent of all Foreclosures and Distressed Property Action.
Foreclosures jump statewide by 40% in California in just one quarter! Welcome to California’s Gold!

What may be more amazing than one Olympian swimming for 8 gold medals is the continued revisionist delusion of our former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan.  Greenspan in typical revisionist fashion, is now stating publicly that the government should have allowed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac shareholders to be wiped out while breaking up the GSEs into 5 or 10 different units.  Thanks for raising your voice now after the fact!  He is a master of covering his tracks and you need to remember that he was a champion in pushing and cheerleading adjustable rate mortgages which have now become the step child and shame of the housing market.

Amazingly Greenspan is saying the right things in certain respects yet this is only to cover his silence during the actual bailing out of Bear Stearns and also, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac through the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 otherwise known as the Crony Capitalism Bill.  Here is what he had to say this week:

“(Reuters) They should have wiped out the shareholders, nationalized the institutions with legislation that they are to be reconstituted… as five or 10 individual privately held units,” which the government would eventually auction off to private investors, Greenspan said in an interview with the Journal.”

Maybe he should have said something during the public hearings.  This is what he had to say about Bear Stearns:

“There’s no credible argument for bailing out Bear Stearns and not the GSEs,” Greenspan told the Journal in an interview, which was reported on Thursday.”

Baloney.  This guy is on a legacy tour trying to revise history.  He is saying the right things but his action speak otherwise.  Here is his prediction on the housing market:

“Home prices in the U.S. are likely to start to stabilize or touch bottom sometime in the first half of 2009,” he said.

But Greenspan cautioned that even at a bottom “prices could continue to drift lower through 2009 and beyond.”

To a certain extent I am starting to understand the interworking of the Fed.  Obviously as a lay person like most of you, much of what goes on behind closed doors is a mystery to most.  In fact, that is part of the mystique of the Federal Reserve that when they speak, a fleet of economist are sent out trying to decode the hidden meaning in the talks.  These economist and analyst then try to bring the conversation to the public with a more down to Earth language.  It is ultimately a sham.  The Federal Reserve as we now all know is rather impotent in this credit crisis.  The one thing Alan Greenspan did have was the ability to speak in a way that moved markets drastically.  As you may have noticed, Federal Reserve meetings don’t carry that power anymore.  The history of the Fed is unknown to most of the public not because the information isn’t there, but most simply do not care.

It is becoming rather apparent that many saw this market imploding yet did nothing.  The logic is rather simple and not necessarily conspiratorial.  The boom of the housing market brought untold riches to many people.  The solution was simple.  Stop the massive and rampant fraud and speculation.  Hike rates up.  Yet these acts would assuredly pop the bubble and blame would be placed on whatever agency or person that took these actions.  The politics got in the way of good policy.  Even during the Great Depression, the Fed was voicing concern in 1928 and 1929 wanting to raise rates and attempt a reigning in of speculation but Wall Street vilified the Fed and they backed off.  No one wants the punchbowl to be taken away and the public got drunk off easy credit.

Sadly this bubble at least on a human nature level is no different from Dutchmen buying tulips, or people investing in Florida real estate in the 1920s, or those trying to get rich quick on any company with a dotcom during the 1990s.  People in speculative manias want to get rich as quickly as possible with the least amount of work.  This idea is appealing to the dark green matter in our psyche that fuels those that buy lottery tickets.  There is an easy meal ticket and all it takes is a little bit of faith and a small payment.

Just like those that saw the oncoming collapse during the late 1920s, many saw it this time around too but realized they did not want to be the one to take the flak for bursting the bubble.  So what happens?  The bubble infects the psyche of the populace and runs to a point where it is simply unsupportable and implodes on itself.  Many are too blame.  Some more than others.  Yet at this point no single organization takes the entire blame.  The games then begin and the mess is much larger than say someone stepping in during 2004, causing a pullback and correcting the ship before it hit a massive iceberg.  At this point, the ship has careened into shore and now it is only a matter of who is to blame for this?  Certainly Greenspan is politically savvy and realizes he needs to get out in front of this ball.  He is a reed in the wind.  During the height of the bubble he fed into the public speculative fervor and championed adjustable rate mortgages and made credit much cheaper through lowering the Fed funds rate.  Now, it is time to spank Bear Stearns on their Fannie Mae.

Look at the current rally today in stocks.  This is a perfect example of delusion.  Today the nationwide foreclosure filings were released and guess what?  They are the highest ever!  Take a look at this chart:

Foreclosures

This was the largest number of foreclosure filings ever recorded yet if you look at some of the financial and housing stocks, they rallied because sales increased a bit.  Again, you should read this article to give you an idea of how these numbers are being massaged and you’ll quickly realize that things are not improving.  And you’ll also notice how Greenspan talks about national housing prices bottoming in 2009.  Which is a nice way of covering yourself since 5 states make up 57% of all foreclosure filings.  Places like California won’t be hitting a bottom until May of 2011 and the data points to this.

Here is a breakdown of foreclosure filings from the top 5 states:

Foreclosure states

 

Clearly states like California with $300 billion in pay option ARMs set to hit their anniversary dates is in a much more precarious situation than say states that have homes priced within the $100,000 to $200,000 price range.  Even with the massive 38% drop, California home prices are still $368,250 while the median household income is $53,770.  This ratio is simply unsupportable even at current levels.

I’ve noticed a few mainstream articles cover the so-called shadow inventory issue.  We talked about this in the previous article but I’ve raised this issue for months on end.  Call it what you want but this is shady manipulation of the market and toying with nuisances of the MLS.  Want some proof?  Take a look at the July 2008 foreclosure filings for California:

July 2008 Data
REO:               23,406

NTS:                12,506

NOD:              36,373

Approximate California Inventory:    310,000

Total Southern California Foreclosure inventory today:    8,548

 

June 2008 sales California:     35,202

June 2008 SoCal sales:            17,424

 

Think about that for a second.  Southern California made up 49.4% of all California sales in the month of June.  We had 23,406 homes go back to lenders in July and 12,506 trustee sales yet the MLS foreclosure sales are only at 8,548 for Southern California?  Let us assume that out of 35,912 homes that were foreclosed in July half are in SoCal.  That would push up the inventory numbers by 17,956 just in one month!  Keep in mind that we are using multiple sources to look at information from Realtytrac, DataQuick, ZipRealty, and yet from most places that do track foreclosures, the numbers are steadily rising yet somehow, the MLS data doesn’t reflect this.  In fact according to their data months of inventory is actually getting healthier.

It is absurd.  REOs are being understated to the point of being criminal.  Yet in manias people want to believe fudged data just like they saw nothing wrong with subprime lending.  When you look at various sources, isn’t apparent what is going on?  Greenspan should win a medal for revising history.  Clearly people are now trying to underplay the actual market data and want to believe that housing is at a bottom.  Anyone with an ounce of logic can see the numbers above and see something is clearly wrong.

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Post from: Dr. Housing Bubble Blog

Olympic Gold Medal: Greenspan Tells us Housing will Bottom in 2009. Meantime Foreclosure Filings hit Historical Record.

Related Posts:
Housing Perception Foreclosing on Reality: The Fundamental Housing Attribution Error.
Parallel Universe: Housing Still Hurting on Main Street while Wall Street Celebrates.
The Abyss is Deep: The Housing Abyss is Deep: 4 Major Reasons Why Housing in Southern California is Nowhere Near a Bottom.
Foreclosure Nation: More Like Foreclosure States. 4 States Made up 50 Percent of all Foreclosures and Distressed Property Action.
Foreclosures jump statewide by 40% in California in just one quarter! Welcome to California’s Gold!

Via [DrHousingBubble]

Filed under: Competitive strategy, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Nokia Corp. (NOK), Research in Motion (RIMM)

The prevailing wisdom would have to be that there are too many smartphones on the market. Nokia (NYSE: NOK) just launched one to compete with RIM (NASDAQ: RIMM) and Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL). Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) is releasing the G1 later this month. Most of the other large handset companies are also in the business. But Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) now wants to jump in.

According to The Wall Street Journal, “The new phone will likely be released in Europe within the next two months.”

Given the amount of competition in the market, it is hard to see how HP will be able to pick up much market share. It is hard to imagine that it can offer features beyond those the iPhone and BlackBerry already have.

The problem with the new device may be greater than that. HP has had the image of being a “winner” over the last two years as financial results have increased. Its PCs and printers are leaders in their fields.

Investors would think that HP would want to dodge a failure in a crowded market to avoid the market looking at the company as one that makes poor product decisions and tries to expand beyond its core franchises. To make matters worse, HP will probably never sell enough phones to meaningfully add to its revenue.

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

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Via [bloggingstocks]

A guest post by new Blownmortgage.com contributor, MG Dungan.  MG has gone from Wharton to Wall St. to real estate to Blown Mortgage. 

Whilst all eyes were upon the Bailout negotiations, there was a little changeroo in the Wachovia rescue package.

According to Reuters on October 3, “Wells Fargo & Co agreed to buy Wachovia Corp. for more than $16 billion, besting a U.S government-backed Citigroup Inc. bid for some of its assets, in a deal that would catapult Wells Fargo to the top ranks of national consumer banks.

For each share of Wachovia, investors will receive 0.1991 Wells Fargo share, which is equal to $7 a share based on Wells Fargo’s closing price on Thursday of $35.16.

A Wachovia spokeswoman said neither Citigroup nor the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp is involved in the transaction.

(more…)

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