Archive for October 16th, 2008

Filed under: After the bell, Earnings reports, Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Yahoo! (YHOO), Market matters, Citigroup Inc. (C), Merrill Lynch (MER)

Many market observers would say that the indexes swung widely today. All that should matter is that they ended up. Oil dropped below $70 which was heartening to anyone who wanted to know if inflation is dead. Here are the unofficial closing numbers:

DJIA: 8.973.28 (up 4.61%)

NASDAQ: 1,717.71 (up 5.49%)

S&P 500 845.81 (up 4.18%)

Citigroup (NYSE: C) has another embarrassing quarter. The big bank had yet another write-down of bad paper on its balance sheet, this time for $4.4 billion. That caused a loss of $2.8 billion compared to a profit of $2.2 billion last year.The news kept the stock in the red most of the day.

Another American financial icon, Merrill Lynch (NYSE: MER), lost a ton of money. The broker had a deficit of $5.2 billion. The firm said the September was especially bad for business that may make investors think that the fourth quarter is not likely to be strong.

In Europe, another massive bank has bad new. UBS (NYSE: UBS) had to take $5.7 billion from the Swiss government for a 9% interest. It also turned over almost $60 billion in bad paper for the central bank to hold. No one knows the value of those assets. The Swiss taxpayers may be getting a big bill.

A comment by Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) CEO Steve Ballmer that doing a deal with Yahoo! (NASDAQ: YHOO) might make economic sense sent the portal company up over 12%.

Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) puts out earnings tonight, which should set the tone for tomorrow.

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

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: After the bell, Earnings reports, Dell (DELL), Coca-Cola (KO), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Wells Fargo (WFC)

Between today and yesterday, it is almost as if Monday’s massive rally never happened. US markets moved down an average of well over 8%.

The details:

DJIA: 8,570.19 off 7.96%

Nasdaq: 1,628.33 off 8.45%

S&P 500 907.32 off 9.06%

JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM) has just released earnings and Jamie Dimon is showing he is a better manager than we even knew he was. The banking giant made $0.11 EPS on $14.74 billion in revenues. First Call had estimates at -$0.21 EPS and roughly $16 billion in revenues.

Continue reading Closing bell: Dow down 733 points, markets give back Monday’s gift

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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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Post from: Dr. Housing Bubble Blog

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]

Another guest post from MG who went from Wharton to Wall St. to real estate to Blown Mortgage.

Not all that much seems to have come from the G7+ meeting this past weekend. We somehow expected more than: “The Federal Reserve led an unprecedented push by central banks to flood the financial system with dollars, backing up government efforts to restore confidence and helping to drive down money-market rates.

In its statement the Fed said:

“In order to provide broad access to liquidity and funding to financial institutions, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, the Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan, and the Swiss National Bank are jointly announcing further measures to improve liquidity in short-term U.S. dollar funding markets.

To assist in the expansion of these operations, the Federal Open Market Committee has authorized increases in the sizes of its temporary swap facilities with the BoE, the ECB, and the SNB, so that these central banks can provide U.S. dollar funding in quantities sufficient to meet demand.”

And just in the nick of time, we observe, this being options expiration week.

(more…)

Once we have moved past this current economic crisis, Fannie and Freddie must be fully privatized.

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Blackstone Group L.P (BX)

Despite having lots of cash - and little debt - shares of Blackstone Group LP (NYSE: BX) have collapsed along with the other financials. Over the past year, the stock price has plunged from $29.38 to a recent low of $6.88.

But the firm’s uber dealmaker, Stephen Schwarzman, is getting optimistic. At the Super Return Middle East conference, he gave a presentation that extolled the benefits of the US’s ambitious - and expensive - plan to get things back on track. Yes, he thinks it’s a good idea for the Feds to become equity holders in some of the top US banks.

So, why is this die-hard capitalist turning into a government supporter? Well, I guess the globalization of finance requires new approaches. In fact, Schwarzman mentioned that it was critical that the recent interventions have involved a variety of governments.

What’s more, by having a strong government backstop, institutions will have a comfort level with counterparty risks. In other words, it’s a good bet that we’ll start seeing some risk taking again. And, for Schwarzman, it should also mean a re-emergence of buyout activity, which has been virtually frozen over the past few months..

Tom Taulli is the author of various books, including The Complete M&A Handbook and The Edgar Online Guide to Decoding Financial Statements. He is also the founder of BizEquity, a valuation website

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Filed under: Private equity

In late 2005, Apollo Management Group agreed to pay $1.3 billion for Linens ‘n Things, taking the company private. It proved to be horrible timing, as the housing market began its dramatic decline.

And the credit markets eventually crumbled, making the investment unworkable. In fact, the company had to file for bankruptcy in May.

Linens ‘n Things tried to sell itself. Unfortunately, there were no bidders willing to take on the risks. So, this week the company will undergo a liquidation process.

No doubt, this is a big fall. Last year, Linens ‘n Things posted revenues of $2.8 billion and had 589 stores across 47 states. There will also be a real impact on the employee base - which was 17,500 last year - as well as the 1,000 suppliers.

At the same time, expect some bargain-basement prices at local Linens ‘n Things stores over the next few weeks.

Tom Taulli is the author of various books, including The Complete M&A Handbook and The Streetsmart Guide to Short Selling: Techniques the Pros Use to Profit in Any Market He is also the founder of BizEquity, a valuation website

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