Archive for December 1st, 2008

Filed under: General Motors (GM)

Imagine going to buy a Chevy in Akron and not being able to find one. The dealer closed due to low sales and lack of financing.

According to The Wall Street Journal, “The National Automobile Dealers Association estimates 700 new-car dealerships will close this year, up from 430 last year, and taking with them an estimated 37,100 jobs.”

So, the government may put as much as $10 billion into a GM (NYSE: GM) buyout of Chrysler which could mean a loss of 60,000 jobs in a consolidation only to find that the new company is having trouble selling cars because it has lost retail outlets.

The car company rescue looks like the mortgage system rescue. The federal government puts a lot of money into large banks in the hopes that it will be loaned out to homeowners. People with houses get almost none of the money and their default rates go up, further damaging bank balance sheets.

If the government is going to save the car industry, it had better save the car dealers. Without them, there is no industry.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 24/7 Wall St.

BloggingStocksThe real car bailout candidates: Dealerships originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Tue, 28 Oct 2008 12:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Rants and raves, General Electric (GE), Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Chasing Value, Best Stocks for 2008

It was only seven weeks ago that I posted Chasing Value: Considering Berkshire Hathaway… again. At the time, Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.B) was trading around $3,850 for the “B” shares.

Well, I think the time for consideration is over and this morning I placed a limit order for the stock. I think the time is right when stories like Berkshire Hathaway at Lowest Close Since Feb. 2007 and my colleague Peter Cohan’s Warren Buffett is not perfect are being trumpeted in the media.

For those who have followed “my pal Warren” Buffett for years, or even decades, these cautionary stories of him losing his edge are as silly as trying to predict where the DJIA will be on a given date. As for Peter suggesting that he was early buying into Goldman Sachs Group (NYSE: GS) or General Electric (NYSE: GE) three weeks ago, well my gosh, it has only been three weeks!

I understand that the prevailing wisdom seems to be running against the buy and hold approach. But three weeks is kind of short to be passing judgment, don’t you think? The DJIA is down 42% while Berkshire is only down 31% from its high of $5059.

Perhaps investors have punished the stock because GS and GE are down. Maybe it is because Berkshire has been buying up railroads and that strategy is less important with oil prices falling 55% since the summer high of $147 a barrel. It could also be because people have lost their minds — who knows?

Continue reading Chasing Value: Berkshire - you’re selling, I’m buying!

BloggingStocksChasing Value: Berkshire - you’re selling, I’m buying! originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Tue, 28 Oct 2008 14:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Deals, Bad news, Rants and raves, General Motors (GM)

You may file this under he can’t be serious.

Looking in The New York Times business section, I notice that GM CEO Rick Wagoner skipped on over to Washington with his hat in his hand. It seems that Mr. Wagoner has discovered that the bailout legislation has been written in a manner that would allow him to get some money for his flailing company, General Motors Corp. (NYSE: GM). The funniness starts when you realize that Rick wants some money from the government (read that, us, the taxpayers) so he can finish totally wrecking his company by merging it with Chrysler. Really, the idea is almost too funny to laugh at. It makes me glad that my dad dumped his GM holdings when he did.

The Times‘ article states: “If G.M. or Chrysler were to go under, tens of thousands of people would be thrown out of work.” That may be true in a fashion, but I have news for the Times and Mr. Rick Wagoner: if this merger happens, about 40% of those people now employed by the two companies will probably be out of work anyway. On the other hand, a merger of this sort would effectively pitch the UAW into the street, pretty much for good. Oh, I bet our friend Rick already thought about that.

If anyone who reads this has a chance to talk with GM’s CEO Rick Wagoner before he pillages the public coffers to assure his income for a few more quarters, he/she might want to offer him this one little gem of wisdom:

An attractive, quality product, in keeping with the times, would really get your rear out of a jam, Rick.

BloggingStocksIs a GM / Chrysler bailout and merger really the way to go? originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Tue, 28 Oct 2008 09:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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In Los Angeles and other big cities many people get lost in the concrete jungle of urbanism.  In fact, hundreds of people die alone each year without any human contact with the outside universe.  It is as if they have disconnected from the actual grid of social interaction.  Every year a service in Los Angeles […]
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The Fed Scorecard: 9 Months of Cutting and Red Queen’s Race. Is the Fed Done Cutting Rates?
Emerging Economic Trends: Housing Swaps, Frugality, and Selling Homes in Lower Priced Areas.
Stop Saving Now and Spend Those Rebates! The Home Refinancing Well Has Run Dry.

In Los Angeles and other big cities many people get lost in the concrete jungle of urbanism.  In fact, hundreds of people die alone each year without any human contact with the outside universe.  It is as if they have disconnected from the actual grid of social interaction.  Every year a service in Los Angeles is done with cremated remains of those who have passed away and city workers, with all their abilities try to find ties with potential family members.  You would think that in a technologically advanced age that everyone would have at least one connection to another human in this world.  That is not the case.

The reason I bring up this point is how disconnected we have gotten from one another and how this is simply one additional facet to this economic calamity.  A few years ago I was getting a loan for an investment property.  Nice little place that was out of the state and met my criteria for a good buy and hold rental.  I shopped around for the best mortgage rate and found a place online in Arizona.  The broker I worked with was a good salesman and all the paperwork was done via the phone and e-mail.  Never met the guy.  Got an excellent rate and didn’t even have to show one W-2 form.  In fact, I could have gotten a loan 5 times as big if my heart desired and that was a scary prospect because it made me realize how little oversight was in the system.

I remember at the time that the broker was trying to push me into an option ARM but I had to explain to him that I strictly dealt with 30 year fixed mortgages.  He was sincere in that he believed what he was trying to sell was truly the best product.  It was more a case of ignorance and lack of future planning.  I think of the $500 billion in option ARMs that will be striking down upon this nation in 2009 and 2010 during the worst economic crisis of our lives.  The broker worked for a company that has long ago imploded.  Not sure what he is doing today.

That is the ease in which a decentralized economy has allowed people to eliminate any face to face contact.  Loans were made across the country to people who could have claimed anything on paper.  No one really cared.  Everything was front loaded and long-term planning didn’t matter.  Like the person that passes away alone, usually the city workers find years and years of unpaid bills, QVC bought items that remain unopened, and observations that may seem incredible to the general public.  Yet this is what we have on our hands at the moment.  A decade of hidden bets, horrible investments, and toxic waste is now coming to the surface.

The Mighty are not Immune

Warren Buffet who once stated derivatives were “financial weapons of mass destruction” is now facing the wrath of the derivatives market.  It is incredible that the cost to protect against Berkshire being unable to meet its debt payments based on credit-default swaps has more than tripled in two months.  The swaps jumped over 475 basis points from 129 only two months ago.  Berkshire is now down a stunning 43 percent for the year when the previous worst year in its 40 year record was a drop of 6.2 percent in 2001.  Seeing this massive conglomerate take a near 50% hit is stunning and a blow to confidence.  If the Oracle of Omaha can’t get it right in this market, who can?

Now, it isn’t that the [once] wealthiest man in the world is feeling the pain of the markets but what investments he made to feel the pain.  He holds large stakes in American Express and Wells Fargo who haven’t done well in the current market.  Berkshire’s income stream largely from insurance holdings is down 77%.  His public buy of Goldman Sachs led many sheep to the slaughter thinking he saw value in the once Golden boy of Wall Street.  Since that time, Goldman has been cut in half:

Goldman Sachs

We also see the massive banking giant Citi taking a major pummeling in this current market.  It is now trading well in the single digits even after announcing a major job cut of 52,000 for the upcoming months.  It was the second biggest mass job layoff announcement in history.  Take a look at Citi:

Citi

This market has no mercy for anyone.  It would appear that the only safe place to be right now is in cash.

Consumers Forced to Save

There is a silent depression hitting the nation that is finally coming to the surface.  That is the life of living on the edge of financial ruin with only one paycheck keeping you liquid.  With unemployment sky rocketing, many people are being forced off that edge in a wave of insolvency.  I think a story that highlights this is how a colleague thought that his home equity line and his credit cards were his “emergency savings” and this was his buffer.  If he ever needed cash desperately, he had access to a $50,000 home equity line and $20,000 in credit cards.  Well guess what?  WaMu which was the home equity line provider  closed his line down here in California since he was now in a negative equity position and his credit cards have been chopped down to $5,000.  In his mind, he has had $65,000 in his savings wiped away.  How many others are in this kind of mindset?

You also don’t want to count or trust the government completely.  Remember that $700 billion TARP plan that was supposedly going to buy toxic assets?  As it turns out, that never happened.  Much of the funds went as capital injections to banks.  This wasn’t the essence of the plan but these people are making it up as they go along.  Ironically, since the bailout bill was passed the market has tanked even further:

Dow Jones Industrial Average

A near 3,000 point drop in less than 2 months is a crash.  Wasn’t the bailout suppose to stop a crash?  Are you meaning to tell me that if the bailout didn’t go through the market would be 5,000 points down?  Consumers unlike the government have to operate in a world of money reality.  They have no access to bailouts.  And people are actually focusing more on servicing current debts:

Consumer Debt

If you look at the above chart, this is the first significant decline since the early 90s recession.  This may on the surface look like a good sign but all it is showing is the massive contraction in debt but also all the debt destruction via bankruptcies and foreclosures where debt is literally evaporating.  Think of it this way.  You lose your home and go bankrupt and that is all your debt.  You technically have no debt at least on paper.  But would you really claim this person is in good shape?  Many Real Homes of Genius are hitting the market here in California, in fact every 30 seconds to 1 minute a home is being foreclosed on here in the state.

Job Protectionism

The few remaining doubters keep saying this won’t be that bad because we won’t see the Great Depression soup lines.  Well what about job fair lines?

Job Fair Line Monster

Source:  Gawker

Someone sent me the above picture taken from a Monster job fair in New York on Wednesday November 12.  Normally you would see a sizable line but this time the line curves around the entire avenue block.  People are doing all they can to look for work.  This is merely a reflection of the poor economic landscape.  Maybe it isn’t as powerful as a soup line but you can rest assured many people in that line are distressed.

The climate is such where everyone is on pins and needles worrying about their jobs.  Some rightfully so.  October was horrible but just look at November.  November is already on pace to being the worst month on record this year for the markets and we still have a few days left.  What good news is going to come out?  Unemployment insurance claims are at 16 year highs which only mean the next job report is going to be brutal.

In addition, many states are cutting budgets back with hiring freezes and also cutting pay for employees.  They are not in good shape.  California is currently in a  special session which seems to be going nowhere.  It also doesn’t solve next year’s budget which will be horrific.  Things are grim.

Being protective of your job is a natural and human instinct.  But even many places are seeing over qualified employees vying for retail jobs (those that are still open).  Times are tough and all the data is pointing to tougher times.  Gear up and now you know why people are saying, “what the TARP just happened?”  What just happened is the crony capitalist on Wall Street with their idiotic politicians just suckered you for a nice chunk of change.

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Post from: Dr. Housing Bubble Blog

What the TARP? Cutting Back to the Necessities: 3 Emerging Trends in this Economic Crisis. The Mighty are Falling, Consumers Forced to Save, and Job Protectionism.

Related Posts:
California Financial Stagpression: Budget Deficit Hits $11.2 Billion Deficit 6 Weeks after Signing Budget. 5 Reasons Why California will see a Deteriorating Economy in 2009.
Three Emerging Trends of a Depressed Economy: Pundits Screaming for Economic Socialism, People Going Back to College, and 99 Cent Stores Taste Inflation.
The Fed Scorecard: 9 Months of Cutting and Red Queen’s Race. Is the Fed Done Cutting Rates?
Emerging Economic Trends: Housing Swaps, Frugality, and Selling Homes in Lower Priced Areas.
Stop Saving Now and Spend Those Rebates! The Home Refinancing Well Has Run Dry.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

People are not the only ones left homeless by foreclosure. Nearly three-quarts of all American households include a family pet, according to No Paws Left Behind and when families face tough economic times, it is often the animals who fare the worst. It is believed that as many as 4 million Americans and 1.25 million pets my lose their home in the current economic crisis.

“In an eforst to help families coping with the devastating foreclosure process, we are bringing awareness to the growing trend of abandoned pets and offering possible solutions,” said Cheryl Lang, founder of the non-profit No Paws Left Behind and president of Intergrated Mortgage Solutions. “We founded No Paws Left Behind to provide homeowners facing foreclosure with a resource for finding alternative housing for their pets during this difficult time. Through visiting our website, borrowers are provided with an array of housing options for their pets, whether a no-kill shelter or temporary foster care. No Paws Left Behind will also provide monetary assistance for pet deposits required by new landlords.”

No Paws Left Behind’s mission includes drawing attention to outdated legislation preventing the removal of pets from abandoned properties prior to the completion of the eviction process as well as educating homeowners on their options when facing foreclosure. A link on the website also allows visitors to sign a petition advocating changine the laws regarding abandoned pets at the national level. The website also includes helpful information from the American Humane Society for both homeowners and lenders. The most important piece of advice for homeowners is not to leave pets when a home is vacated or abandoned. It may be weeks or longer before a lender is legally able to enter the property and it is unlikely pets will survive that long without food or water. For lenders the most important advice is to listen for any sounds of abandoned pets whenever they visit the property and to make inquiries among neighbors as to whether or not the owners had pets and where those pets may be. If pets are suspected to have been abandoned inside the property lenders should contact local animal control officers immediately for assistance.

The problem of pets being abandoned along with houses recieved considerable attention from bloggers earlier this year when photographs of emaciated animals were widely circulated online. Since the it is likely the problem and the number of abandoned pets has only increased. Unfortunately, USA Today reports that no one keeps track of the actual number of pets left behind when homes are forclosed upon.

Animal shelters and agencies throughout the nation are doing their best to keep pace with the problem. Many organizations are suffering from shrinking budgets as well as growing demand for their services. Still, if someone you know is facing foreclosure or suspects a neighbor has abandoned a pet along with the home, there is always room in the shelter for one more. And if you are looking for organizations to make charitable donations to this holiday season don’t forget local shelters.

Source [blownmortgage]

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