Archive for December 5th, 2008

Filed under: Wal-Mart (WMT), Starbucks (SBUX), Sears Holdings (SHLD)

This post is part of AOL Money & Finance’s Best & Worst in Money 2008 feature.

As we undertake a hasty exit from the tumult of 2008 and plunge headlong into the mysteries of 2009, we might find it interesting to consider some business entities that could benefit from a little “freshening up.” Four familiar names; Kmart, Playboy, Starbucks, and Wall Street, are each in need of a timely makeover, to varying degrees. But if you could chose just one of these big name operations to fix up for 2009, which one would it be, and how would you fix it?

First let’s consider Kmart, the adopted son of Sears Holdings Corp. (NASDAQ: SHLD). What are the changes that Kmart might need to remain competitive going into 2009? Should the company try playing the boutique angle, which failed to work for Wal-Mart Stores Inc (NYSE: WMT)? Should the company tighten up and consolidate, while pursuing a deeper product value play, or should it attempt to spread out its market coverage and work over its wholesale vendors, while engaging Wal-Mart in a game of cut-throat retail price points? If you were CEO of Kmart, what would you change?

Continue reading Best & Worst in Money 2008: Most in need of a makeover

Best & Worst in Money 2008: Most in need of a makeover originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 05 Dec 2008 14:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Forecasts, Commodities, Oil, Recession

Economist Peter Dawson has this little gasoline economizing tactic that he’s used probably since he earned his driving license, way back in the twentieth century.

Whenever Dawson buys gas, he only buys what he thinks he will need for a two-week period. It’s a tactic he says would help keep gasoline prices lower if every driver followed the rule, by decreasing excess demand.

“It may be a reduction of only 2 or 3 gallons per purchase, but add that up over 70 or 80 million motorists and I think you see the impact on gasoline prices,” Dawson said.

An ever-economizing economist

And lately, being the ever-economizing sort, Dawson has been deploying another tactic: he won’t buy gasoline if the price is trending lower. If the price is dropping, he’ll wait as long as he safely can, before buying gasoline. “It’s made the difference of as much as 30 cents per gallon less during gasoline’s recent price drop,” he said.

The average U.S. gasoline price has been dropping for about five months, from a regular unleaded price of about $4.10 per gallon in July to about $1.80 per gallon now, Dawson said, and the price is likely to drop more, at least until March 2009. The main reason: the collapse in oil prices, due to the U.S. and global recessions. Oil, which traded at a record $147.27 per barrel this summer, is now trading around $42 per barrel.

Continue reading Average U.S. gasoline price, down to about $1.80, is likely to fall more

Average U.S. gasoline price, down to about $1.80, is likely to fall more originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 05 Dec 2008 13:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dreams do come true.  In the ongoing saga of Ed McMahon’s housing troubles on his Beverly Hills home, yesterday Ed’s realtor stepped up to plate asking for someone to come purchase the home before it would be foreclosed in the next two weeks.  Well as it turns out none other than real estate mogul Donald […]
Related Posts:
Real Homes of Genius: Today we Salute you Pacoima. Zillow says $457,000 but Listed at $225,000?
Real Homes of Genius: Today We Salute you Huntington Park. Tweedledum and Tweedledee of housing. $500,000 Homes in Wonderland.
Real Homes of Genius: $438,000 for 816 square feet in Pico Rivera! Another Example of Manic SoCal Housing!
Real Homes of Genius: Today we Salute you Stanton.
Real Homes of Genius: Today we Salute you Baldwin Park. When you Only Need to Show Concrete to Sell at $400,000+.

Dreams do come true.  In the ongoing saga of Ed McMahon’s housing troubles on his Beverly Hills home, yesterday Ed’s realtor stepped up to plate asking for someone to come purchase the home before it would be foreclosed in the next two weeks.  Well as it turns out none other than real estate mogul Donald Trump will be purchasing the home according to the L.A. Times.  The agreed upon price is currently undisclosed but Ed has lowered the price on the home from $7.7 million to $4.6 million.  Either way, we’ll find out soon enough what the agreed upon price is.  The Donald does have a sweet spot for the 90210 zip code.

Today in a very special Real Homes of Genius we are going to look at the 6 counties that make up the Southern California market and give you a taste of what is happening on the ground.  These homes will range from super prime homes to something akin to the $1 home that sold in Detroit:

Detroit $1 home

*Source:  Zillow

You’ll love the aerial satellite view from Zillow before the place was stripped naked like a Playboy photo shoot.  This may in fact be the ultimate Real Home of Genius and you can only imagine the face of the agent receiving the whopping 6 cents in commission.  Now on this home we can say that it was worth every penny.  People forget that these homes may have unpaid taxes, major repairs needed, and also may be more of a burden than anything else.  You can be the judge of that.  Detroit has many homes that are practically being given away just to get someone to move in.

In Southern California some people are still in delusion land and think that the housing correction is only a minor bump in the road.  A speed bump in the infinite pursuit of unlimited appreciation.  This is the psychology that is still prevalent in the market.  The market seems to be at a standoff between those that believe the bottom is not yet here and those that think now is the time to buy before prices skyrocket once again.  I tend to believe California won’t see a bottom for another 3 years and prices will fall overall by at least another 20 to 30 percent.

This isn’t some random theory.  The Case-Shiller Index currently has the L.A./O.C. index at 198.59.  The last sold future contract for November of 2011 sold for:

real estate futures

Someone is actually making the bet the Case-Shiller index will fall to 155.  That translates into an additional fall of 21.9% for the entire region.  These are bets that are made with real money.  Clearly the line in the sand is being drawn.  I think those making the bets for stability are vastly underestimating the explosive toxicity of the pay option ARM fiasco that will commence this forth quarter and will hit full stride in 2009.

So let us now salute the 6 counties that arguably are the most overpriced counties in our country.  Today we salute you Southern California with our Real Homes of Genius Award.

County #1 - Los Angeles

Population:                              9,948,081

Area Spotlight:                        Toluca Lake

Median Price zip code:           $862,000

Toluca Lake

What more can you ask for than having NBC-4 weatherman Fritz Coleman as your honorary mayor?  This small community of 16,978 people is between the city of Burbank and North Hollywood.  The Santa Monica Mountains surround the area of Toluca Lake and provide one of the nicer areas of Los Angeles.

Toluca Lake even though it is considered prime, has not been immune to the housing bubble busting.  The area’s median home price is now down 16.6% when it flirted with the $1 million mark.  This 6 bedroom and 7 baths home provides a lake front view (hat tip L).  You are going to love the view since it is going to cost you $6,650,000.  Now before you go to your IndyMac FDIC taken over account to put down a earnest money deposit on this place, you may want to look at the pricing action:

Listing Price History

Date                Price

May 23, 2007 $8,795,000

Jul 10, 2007     $7,795,000

Oct 17, 2007   $7,100,000

Feb 16, 2008   $6,650,000

This place has been on the market for 450 days and has seen a reduction in price by a stunning $2.1 million in one year.  Now that is a true discount.  But is it?  Let us look at the previous sales history on this place:

Date                Price

Jul 31, 1991     $1,200,000

Apr 09, 1999   $1,090,000

This place actually sold for a loss in 1999!  Even given the current selling price, we are talking about a $5.5 million gain in 9 years.  Now that is what we call high hopes.

County #2 - Orange 

Population:                              3,002,048

Area Spotlight:                        Newport Beach

Median Price zip code:           $1.85 million

Newport Beach

Just because Kobe Bryant lives in Newport Beach doesn’t mean all homes will sell for multi-millions.  At least that reality is coming home now.  It was thought during the days of housing bubble lore, that simply buying in Newport Beach meant you were going to be a millionaire with enough money for you to create your own rendition of Redline the movie.
This above home is amazing because who would of thought steel gates would be abound in a community with a $1.85 million median price.  This 3 bedroom and 2 bath home is a nice starter home for any would be millionaire.  This place is on the market and is a foreclosed home. A  foreclosed home in Newport Beach?  That is correct.  The current list price for this home is $1.2 million.  Not bad right?  Well let us look at the previous sales history:

Sale History

12/21/2007: $949,900 *

06/27/2006: $1,477,000

The $949,900 price tag is simply the lender taking the place back.  The more important price point is the $1.47 million.  This home is already selling at a major loss since who only knows if there were second mortgages on this place that are now wiped out.  Given the current market and lack of movement on this place, the current $1.2 million doesn’t seem to be wetting the appetite of many.  At what price will this home sell?  And when it sells, you can rest assured that median price is going to head lower.

County #3 - Riverside

Population:                              2,026,803

Area Spotlight:                        Riverside

Median Price zip code:           $300,000

Riverside

I love trash can real estate photography.  You almost expect Oscar the Grouch to pop and say, “buy me, buy me, buy me!”  Riverside is being hit hard by the housing crisis.  This zip code is now down 36.6% on a year over year basis and once we go into the details of this Real Home of Genius, you will know why.  This 5 bedroom 4 bath home has been on the market only for 3 days at least according to the MLS data.  The current list price is $794,900.  Is this a deal?  Well let us now examine the previous sales history to find out:

Sale History

07/25/2008: $750,000 *

03/21/2007: $1,200,000

04/30/2002: $635,000

Again that $750,000 is simply the lender taking the place back.  With the current sales price, it looks like the lender is simply trying to recoup part of the first mortgage.  This place sold at its peak only last year for $1.2 million.  If you do the math on the current discount, it works out to be approximately 33%.  Lenders are paying attention to the current market price and are cutting prices to reflect this.  A $400,000+ discount is not a bad deal.  That is, if someone even has the money to buy this place in an area where the median priced home is $300,000!  Do you see why this bottom is nowhere insight?

Until we start seeing housing glamour shots, we are nowhere near a bottom.  I’ve seen places in the Midwest where lenders take the time and meticulously arrange homes to sell for $200,000!  Here for a $794,900 home they can’t even move the garbage and recycle cans out of the way.

County #4 - San Bernardino

Population:                              1,999,332

Area Spotlight:                        Fontana

Median Price zip code:           $321,000

Fontana

Don’t you love model homes?  I would get tons of brochures about these places during the boom.  San Bernardino and Riverside counties make up the Inland Empire.  These two areas have been absolutely slammed by the housing correction.  Yet as you can see with L.A. and Orange counties we are simply a year away from catching up as well.

This above home is one reason why Southern California was the epicenter of the housing bubble.  This 4 bedroom 4 baths home have been on the market for 115 days.  Currently the list price is $569,000 which is high for an area with a median priced home goes for $321,000.  This zip code has fallen 25.5% in the last year.  The current list price may not be such a good deal:

fontana21.png

The listing description tells us this is a short sale but the MLS data is stating that it is a foreclosure.  I would venture after looking at the sales price that this is a foreclosure:

Sale History

03/14/2006: $875,000

A 34% discount in two years.  This is why the Inland Empire is having so much pain.  Also given the still high price of fuel, who is willing to commute 30 or 40 miles into OC or L.A. county for work?  The numbers simply do not work.  The incomes in these areas do not remotely reflect the price of some homes.

County #5 - Ventura

Population:                              799,720

Area Spotlight:                        Newbury Park

Median Price zip code:           $699,000

newbury park

This home should be called “when refinancing goes wrong.”  This home is located in Ventura County in the city of Newbury Park.  Newbury Park has seen a 15.7% yearly decline in their housing prices and this is one of the more prime areas of the county.  This home above is a 4 bedroom 3 bath home with apparently dry grass.  This is an REO and is currently on the market for $875,900.  This home simply by looking at the sales history, we can tell that this was a refinance machine:

08/01/2008: $700,000 *

07/27/2006: $296,695*

11/07/2005: $163,000

Again, the August number is simply the bank taking the place back.  But between November of 2005 some $500,000+ in who knows what of mortgages was attached to this place.  Normally the banks take back the REOs should their be no matching bid at auction for the face value of the first mortgage.  The 2006 price was probably a refinance and given the 2008 number, this place was a mortgage equity withdrawal machine.  Don’t you wish you lived in California so you can max out your home, suck out all the equity, and let the bank take back the place?  A salute to you Real Home of Genius in Newbury Park!

County #6 - San Diego

Population:                              2,941,454

Area Spotlight:                        Poway

Median Price zip code:           $550,000

Poway

Our final stop takes us to Poway in San Diego County.  San Diego was the first county to falter during the Southern California bust.  It appreciated the quickest but also fell first.  This 4 bedroom 2 baths home in Poway is another example of the hyper bubble here in the Southland.  First let us look at the sales history action:

07/16/2008: $293,203 *

11/06/2006: $498,000

12/08/2000: $225,000

The bank is going to take a major hit on this one.  The current list price is $320,000 and is sold “as-is” which you are going to see a lot of in the months to come.  The peak price of $498,000 is absurd and even the current price of $320,000 is the lender simply trying to get out as soon as possible.

So there you have it.  These 6 counties have a combined population of 20,830,000+ and still have prices that reflect very little of the incomes of those in the areas.  California is years away from the bubble.  Need more reasons than the above examples?  Read 10 reasons why we are on the verge of flying off the diving board into the housing abyss.

Today we salute you Southern California with our Real Homes of Genius Award.

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Post from: Dr. Housing Bubble Blog

Real Homes of Genius Special Edition: Today we Salute you Southern California. 6 Counties and 6 Homes.

Related Posts:
Real Homes of Genius: Today we Salute you Pacoima. Zillow says $457,000 but Listed at $225,000?
Real Homes of Genius: Today We Salute you Huntington Park. Tweedledum and Tweedledee of housing. $500,000 Homes in Wonderland.
Real Homes of Genius: $438,000 for 816 square feet in Pico Rivera! Another Example of Manic SoCal Housing!
Real Homes of Genius: Today we Salute you Stanton.
Real Homes of Genius: Today we Salute you Baldwin Park. When you Only Need to Show Concrete to Sell at $400,000+.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

Filed under: International markets, Newsletters, Commodities, Agriculture, Stocks to Buy, Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan (POT)

“Investing in agriculture-related companies has been one of our main themes for the past year, and we still favor it,” say resource experts Roger Conrad and Yiannis Mostrous.

The co-editors of Vital Resource Investor note, “We’re adding a new stock to the portfolio that should benefit from the increasingly higher global demand for fertilizer: Potash Corp. (NYSE: POT).

“Potash is the world’s largest and lowest-cost publicly traded potash producer, the fastest-growing segment in the fertilizer business. Its potash reserves are sufficient for more than 100 years of production.

“The company controls about 70% of the world’s excess capacity. Potash Corp is also the world’s third-largest phosphate producer and fourth-largest nitrogen producer. Current phosphate reserves should last more than 50 years.

Continue reading Potash (POT): Planting profits for global growth

BloggingStocksPotash (POT): Planting profits for global growth originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Tue, 28 Oct 2008 13:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Forecasts, Newspapers, Politics, Recession, Financial Crisis

Beige book weakness, nationwide. Holiday retail sales tepid at best (so far). Business investment lackluster. And Friday yet another employment situation report from the good statisticians at the U.S. Department of Labor. Consensus: the U.S. economy probably shed another 300,000 jobs in November.

A decade of descent

One can’t say we weren’t warned about the recession that we’re now in - - not with the increased concentration of wealth and concomitant increase in poverty, lack of job creation, and wage stagnation that accompanied the recent economic expansion, to go along with excessive leverage, system-wide.

New York Times (NYSE: NYT) columnist and Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman provides a little perspective on how we got here and also offers some hope, regarding these trying economic times.

On the signals, or signs, some in economics, corporate, and public policy circles are suggesting that we didn’t have any signs of economic trouble ahead. “Why weren’t we warned?”

Ah, but you were warned, Krugman said. And these warnings were ignored. Item: Clear signs of a housing bubble, after the dot-com bubble a decade earlier. Item: The implosion, and required dissolving of Long Term Capital Management in 1998 - - just one hedge fund, but one that nevertheless temporarily paralyzed credit markets, globally. Item: The near-universal belief in the market’s ability to self-correct, self-police, and if need be, self-punish transgressors, when there was little case precedent to hold that mistaken notion. In sum, there were plenty of warnings, Krugman argues.

Continue reading NYT’s Krugman: The financial and economic warning signs were there

NYT’s Krugman: The financial and economic warning signs were there originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Thu, 04 Dec 2008 18:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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On Monday, all of the financial world turned its ears to announcement that the United States is indeed in a recession, confirmed by the National Bureau of Economic Research. Of course, most of us who have followed the state of the economy already knew this, and are likely shaking their fists at the powers that be and the Kool-Aid drinkers, collectively crying “Told you so!”

The recession, as many of you are already aware of, began as a result of declining home values, and many analysts have stated that the economy will continue to deflate until the housing markets show signs of recovery.

There have already been some positive news bubbling up in the housing market. Mortgage applications increased by a record amount last week, spurred by the Federal Reserve’s announcement that it would purchase mortgage-backed securities, and would be open to making further cuts in prime interest rates.

Additionally, sales in some of the country’s most depressed regions have been recovering, including California and Florida. These regions happen to be the wealthiest of wealthy, so as always in real estate, location is everything. Last month in California’s Orange County region (where yours truly spent some of his college years, yes that OC) sales rose 66% year-over-year. That figure is an astonishing jump, something that should have the market cheering.

Now, the Treasury is mulling a plan that will push mortgage interest-rates down to 4.5% with some help from Fannie and Freddie, after last week announcing that they would be purchasing mortgage-backed securities in an effort to restore liquidity. It’s hard not to be suspicious of plans to artificially inflate a sagging market, especially when it is beginning to show signs of recovery on its own. Artificially low interest rates are what contributed to the boom and bust in the first place. Touting them as a solution seems astoundingly short-sighted, especially when our nation’s spending limits could be cut by nearly $2 trillion, via lines of credit that banks will be reducing or eliminating in order to shore up their balance sheets. Analysts are saying that this could potentially cause housing prices in some areas to drop by another 20%. By that line of thought, banks would essentially be corroding their own balance sheets. Is that what million-dollar executive salary structures are for? To restrict liquidity to consumers when the Fed and Treasury are trying their hardest to restore that liquidity?

One thing is for sure: anyone who has waited until now to buy a home in this decade should be feeling fairly good about themselves.

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