Archive for October 11th, 2008

Filed under: Apple Inc (AAPL), International Business Machines (IBM), Advanced Micro Dev (AMD), Colgate-Palmolive (CL), Costco Wholesale (COST), General Mills (GIS), Procter and Gamble (PG), Yum Brands (YUM), Freep’t McMoRan Copper (FCX), Stocks to Buy, East West Bancorp (EWBC), MetLife Inc. (MET)

No doubt, this week has made it more and more difficult to say anyone should buy stocks at the moment. Even in good, solid, dividend-paying companies. Many analysts and pundits have recommended investors to sell and stay away from the stock market for a while as they don’t see a bottom yet, only more declines.

Others believe the bottom is near and investors shouldn’t try to time it to buy good value stocks. But it seems they are fewer. It has also become a little more difficult to find stocks our bloggers call a Buy. Still there are a few:

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (NYSE: AMD) — while AMD stock did not hold up very well recently, a positive development may encourage buyers as this week spun off its manufacturing business.

Apple Inc (NASDAQ: AAPL) — Apple fans have seen the stock getting pounded the past week, but today it was one of the big winners, jumping 9%. Sheldon Liber notes that “it has not traded at a P/E below it’s projected growth rate in years…” Apple is also expected to announce new laptops next week, including a low-priced model to better position itself among competitors.

Costco (NASDAQ: COST) — Costco reported decent same-store sales this week, and Steven Malls thinks that “Longer-term, Costco will do well.”

Continue reading Stock picks and pans for troubled times: AAPL, COST, EWBC, IBM, YUM, PG …

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I know what you are thinking, “thank goodness for that $810 billion bailout!”  $10 trillion is the new million comrades.  As we blasted through the $10 trillion mark with our national debt, we have also managed to destroy $11 trillion in “wealth” in one year by simply looking at two measures, the residential U.S. real […]
Related Posts:
The Trillion Dollar Question: Looking at the Exact Items That will Cause $1 Trillion in Write-down Losses.
Two Faces of Housing Panic: Schadenfreude and the Lender of Last Resort.
True American Idol: Subprime Mortgage Lenders Send off a Blast Heard Around the World.
Forecasting the Societal Impact of the Housing and Credit Crisis: Recession Trends and Psychological Changes Regarding Housing.
You Can Kiss $2.84 Trillion in Housing Equity Goodbye: The Continued Decline in Real Estate.

I know what you are thinking, “thank goodness for that $810 billion bailout!”  $10 trillion is the new million comrades.  As we blasted through the $10 trillion mark with our national debt, we have also managed to destroy $11 trillion in “wealth” in one year by simply looking at two measures, the residential U.S. real estate market and the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000.  Keep in mind we are only going to look at these two measures in this article.  This does not include other global markets that are outperforming us on the downside making any decoupling theorist update their resumes.  Who knows, with a track record like that they may land a job at CNBC.

As the world central bankers used their T-Mobile Sidekicks to text message one another, the markets had other bad intentions:

Trichet“Big B.  2day w3 hook up 4 mjr mrkt action.”

Ben Bernanke“Word.  Drop the FFR.  Ttyl Trichet.”

What is the point of dropping the rate when people are flat broke?  This is the problem when people do not understand what mainstream America is battling with.  If you watch many news stations they forget that nearly 50% of households have no 401(k) since they cannot afford one to begin with!  Yet they operate under the impression that everyone is gambling in the world casino market.  Normally, a major Fed cut would have a major or at least positive impact on the market.   Now, it is like spitting into the ocean.  Earlier this week, I posted an article that compared the velocity of the 1929 crash to our current market.  We have now surpassed the velocity of the crash during the Great Depression!  From the peak in September of 1929 to September of 1930 the DOW was down 36%.  From the peak in October 2007 to October 2008 we are now down 39%!  But aren’t you glad that we are not officially in a recession?  Otherwise things would really be bad.

No matter how you slice the market whether you look at the NASDAQ, DOW, or S & P 500 they are all getting hammered without prejudice.  Can you believe that I heard some blowhard trying to blame this on the sub-prime market?  Bwahahaha!  Yes, let us blame poor people for crashing the most sophisticated global markets by buying inner city homes at overvalued prices.  Give me a freaking break.  The sub-prime problems now seem like a welcomed distraction in comparison to the credit market freeze, the credit default swap market, and now the consumerist global markets slamming on the breaks.  You know why the global markets are crashing?  Because people turned markets into Ponzi schemes of global proportions.  Now that we have to reconcile reality with values their simply isn’t a correlation.  That is why paying face value for mortgages is absurd.  These places are going to fail anyway.  Why give money to these criminals?

You want a novel idea?  How about we raid the bank and investment accounts of CEOs complicit in this credit casino and use any money we find to fund loan workouts?  We need to get this passed ASAP since those investment accounts they have are taking a beating so we want to make sure we liquidate right now in case the market goes any lower.  If we wait any longer, their account might look like the 401(k) statement of many Americans.  Can you believe that one contention in the bailout bill is about how much money we should give CEOs?  Are you kidding?  We should be talking about how much time they are going to get in the slammer not the size of their golden parachute.

Wilshire 5000    

Wilshire 5000

The Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 is probably one of the best snapshots of the overall U.S. equities market since it covers over 5,000 securities.  Most of the time when you hear about people talking about the “overall” market losing X billion this is what they are referring to.  Since the index itself doesn’t publish up to date market cap information, I had to reconstruct a few data points:

Peak Reached on October 10, 2007:  15,798

52-week low October 9, 2008:           9,187

With that said, the index is weighted so it tries to reflect price changes as accurately as possible.  Of course given the nature of stocks and the size of the index, we only get a rough ball park.  On March 24, 2000 the index hit 14,751 and represented a market value of $14.7 trillion.  Keep in mind this was before the tech bubble popped and many tech stocks are in this index as well.  So with that, we can construct a proportional equation to arrive at an approximation of the peak price:

(14,751 / $14.7 T)  X (15,798 / Market Cap?)

So we’re solving for the market cap at the peak.  With that we get the following:

23,223 / 14,751 = $15.7 Trillion Market Cap at peak

Okay, so now we have a very rough estimate at the peak market cap for a sizeable portion of the U.S. equity markets.  Now we have to calculate the percentage loss.  From the peak hit last October the entire index is now down, 41.8%.  So with that, we can calculate the market cap that is now lost into the great abyss in the worldwide casino:

$15.7 trillion x 41.8% = $6.5 trillion in market cap gone in one year

Now we are not calculating the global beat downs that are occurring.  Let us just take a quick look to see how others are doing:

Nikkei

*Chart Update:  Add an additional 9.62% to the downside.

Hang Seng

*Chart Update:  Add additional 8 to 9% decline to the downside to chart.

Brazil

FTSE

In relation to the above, we aren’t doing so bad incredibly.  Yet if you need any further proof you can examine the Russian stock market and other markets and you’ll find similar patterns.

Case-Shiller Index and Housing Loss

The most widely followed and trusted housing measure in terms of housing percent increases and declines is the Case-Shiller Index.  Most tend to view this as the most accurate measure of overall price declines since it looks at the same home over time which tends to give a better feel of how the market is performing.  Given that the index only looks at 20 large metro areas, it does not cover the entire country.  However, since most people live in these areas it does reflect a good measure of the housing market like the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 does for stocks.  Let us look at the chart:

Case-Shiller

The peak was reached on July of 2006 at 206.52.  You need to remember that for the baseline year 2000, the number is set at 100.  The 206.52 represents a doubling in price over 6 years.  The most current data figure is that of July 2008 and puts us at 166.23, a loss of 19.5% from the peak.  Similar to the above, we approximate a loss from the peak.  At the peak, it was estimated that the United States residential real estate market was valued at $24 trillion.  With that we can estimate the current amount of equity that has evaporated:

$24 trillion x 19.5% = $4.68 trillion in housing equity gone

So in a little over one year, Americans have seen:

$6.5 + $4.68 = $11.18 trillion in wealth disappear

Just to put that into perspective, the dot-com bubble burst was estimated to wipe out $5 trillion in market value of technology companies from March 2000 to October of 2002.  Keep in mind many people are estimating that we will see a national housing price decline of 30% before this is said and done.  If that is the case, we will see an additional $2.52 trillion housing equity that will evaporate before we hit bottom.
That is why the $700 billion for buying up bad assets makes no sense whatsoever.  All this is going to do is help support a few lenders and given that $11.18 trillion is already gone, what is that going to do in the larger picture?  If they really want to help, that money should be used for job creation in sustainable fields or science and research development for this country.  At least we’ll get something from that instead we are going to flush it down the toilet.  You want to see how the market responded to the bailout visually?

Markets

*Click to enlarge

The Dow is now down nearly 18% from the market open on Friday October 3 when the bill was passed.  Comrades, this is not the way to run a free market.  If we are going to be giving money out we might as well use it for the greater common good.  After all, $1 trillion ain’t what it used to be.

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Post from: Dr. Housing Bubble Blog

Who Moved my $11 Trillion? How to Lose $11 Trillion in One Year: Housing Market Collapsing, Stocks Crashing, and Comrade Economics.

Related Posts:
The Trillion Dollar Question: Looking at the Exact Items That will Cause $1 Trillion in Write-down Losses.
Two Faces of Housing Panic: Schadenfreude and the Lender of Last Resort.
True American Idol: Subprime Mortgage Lenders Send off a Blast Heard Around the World.
Forecasting the Societal Impact of the Housing and Credit Crisis: Recession Trends and Psychological Changes Regarding Housing.
You Can Kiss $2.84 Trillion in Housing Equity Goodbye: The Continued Decline in Real Estate.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

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

Update: Bill passes 263-171. See who voted yea or nay.

The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 failed in the House—225 to 228— on September 29. In an unprecedented and unconstitutional move, the bill was sent to the Senate, loaded up with pork and overwhelmingly passed—75 to 24— with no substantive change to the provisions that caused it to be rejected by the House.

So, we want to know, where’s the stimulation?

What it won’t do:

1. Stimulate employment:

The plan has no direct affect on employment. Buying old bad debt from banks in exchange for brand-new, at-least-temporarily-good new debt does not decrease leverage, does not increase the money supply, and does not motivate banks to start lending. Really, who are they going to lend to in a rapidly deteriorating economy?

Further, it has little direct affect on employment other than on the Wall Streeters who will manage the pools of money.

It does not lighten the burden on Americans who are already in deep financial trouble; in fact, it increases the burden. The Treasury and Fed do not have an extra $700bn; they will have to borrow it. This bailout, the first tranche—not the whole thing, the first tranche— of which is $700bn, will be the largest tax increase in history.

(more…)

Filed under: Wal-Mart (WMT), Newsletters, Stocks to Buy

“‘Easy hold’ stocks have strong finances, consistent sales and earnings and moderate volatility; one such stock is Wal-Mart Stores (NYSE: WMT),” says Chuck Carlson in The DRIP Investor.

“Easy hold stocks are ‘easy holds’ for good reason — their price action generally does not force you to make too many decisions about selling. And one that has held up quite well of late is Wal-Mart, the world’s largest retailer.

“The firm’s discount focus has been especially popular with consumers in recent months in light of the sluggish economy and job markets. The firm has beaten earnings estimates in each of the last four quarters. Record profits of $3.50 per share are expected for the current fiscal year ending January 2009.

“Long term, I expect Wal-Mart to provide the sort of steady sales and profit growth that will keep its stock trending higher.

“While I would not expect Wal-Mart to keep pace during the next big upward move in the market, I think the consistency of returns the stock will show over the next several years should be rewarding for investors looking for acceptable returns at moderate risk levels.

“Wal-Mart also offers a direct-purchase plan whereby any investor may buy shares directly, the first share and every share. Minimum initial investment is $250. However, Wal-Mart will waive the minimum if an investor agrees to automatic monthly investment via electronic debit of a bank account of at least $25.”

Steven Halpern’s TheStockAdvisors.com offers a daily look at the latest market commentary and favorite stock picks and investment ideas from the nation’s leading financial newsletter advisors.

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Frustrated by the government’s latest move, Freddie Mac employees are beginning to air their opinions.

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Apple Inc (AAPL), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Best Buy (BBY)

Best Buy, Inc. (NYSE:BBY ) is staging a marketing event to deploy two “store brand” laptops that will hopefully address two major complaints of laptop PC buyers - weight and battery life. Of course, this has been the argument for portable PCs for over a decade. The two new laptops are manufactured by Toshiba and Hewlett-Packard Corp. (NYSE: HPQ) and will be sold under the faux brand “Blue Label.” This name probably signifies Best Buy’s official corporate color more than anything.

Of course, both laptops will retail for $1,199, a hefty price for anything but a high-end retail laptop PC in 2008. If Best Buy is going to price these at $1,200, it better darn sure hope that there is something revolutionary about these two models. Specifically, a battery life increase of at least 50% under normal operating conditions, as well as at least 1.5 pounds less in weight than comparative models that cost half as much. A pound is hugely significant in the laptop PC weight arena — but Best Buy needs to go beyond that for such a premium price. Agree? Disagree?

Although Best Buy is marketing these as designed by “customer feedback,” there’s nothing earth shattering here. Battery life and weight have always been at the forefront of wants and needs from the laptop PC consumer. Manufacturers have seen fit to continue making their wares compete with features and aesthetics more than what customers have asked for, such as Apple, Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) who clearly gets it. But the Windows PC world? Not so much. Will this be another empty promise or a half-hearted marketing move? We’ll see once these two models hit store shelves and customers actually start using them.

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Filed under: General Electric (GE), Ford Motor (F), International Business Machines (IBM), Barclays plc ADS (BCS)

When you have a trading day like today and it comes after a week like this week, it is hard to determine if you are happier that the rally came on at the end of the day or if you are happier that the closing bell came to end the week. The markets closed down today but today felt like a win when you consider the 400 point move higher off of late day lows in the last hour. There are hopes of a coordinated G7 announcement this week along with some fresh hopes that the Treasury will make new banking injections and help in the LIBOR woes. The bond traders left at 2:00 PM early for Columbus Day, and the bond market is closed Monday.

Here are the unofficial closing bell levels, and remember that the exchange takes much longer to find actual close levels right now:
DJIA 8,477.40 -101.79 -1.19%
NASDAQ 1,649.51 +4.39 +0.27%
S&P500 901.24 -8.68 -0.95%
10YR T-NOTE 3.861% +0.027%
Top Analyst Upgrades

Barclays plc (NYSE: BCS) fell on reports that the financial bank giant is considering raising capital as part of the government’s bailout package in the UK. Shares were down 9% at $14.66 in the final minutes before the close.

Continue reading Closing Bell: Spelling relief, when a loss is a win

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