Archive for December 20th, 2008

Filed under: Newsletters, Commodities, Stocks to Buy, Obama Picks

This post is part of a special report, A Dozen Ways to Play an Obama Building Boom.

“President-elect Obama recently announced that he is working on a stimulus package that could be as large as $1 trillion,” notes BizRadio host Daniel Frishberg in The MoneyMan Report.

“This money would be used on infrastructure. Items such as new roads, bridges, etc. would be on the ‘to do list.’

“The theory is that this would bring jobs and thus help stimulate the economy. On this news, many of the infrastructure companies rallied. These are the same companies that have been severely beaten up due to global growth slowing.

“Thus, with a new stimulus package focused on infrastructure spending imminent, not only in the U.S. but some emerging countries, we are using some of our cash to invest in various infrastructure companies.

“We are purchasing Fluor Corp. (NYSE: FLR). This is a global engineering firm that will be a huge beneficiary from all the infrastructure spending.

“Even though the stock has recovered the last few weeks, it is still down over 50% from its high. Given their prospects and valuation, we believe this is a great company to invest in at present levels.

“We are also purchasing KBR, Inc. (NYSE: KBR). The company was spun off from Halliburton and they focus on engineering & construction. KBR gets a lot of their sales from contracts in Iraq and other countries.

“The stock fell 75% before recovering somewhat. However, the stock is still down 63% in the last 12 months and we believe the prospects for their business are excellent.”

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.

Obama’s to-do list: Bridges and roads originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Sat, 20 Dec 2008 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Newsletters, Commodities, Stocks to Buy, Obama Picks

This post is part of a special report, A Dozen Ways to Play an Obama Building Boom.

“President-elect Obama recently announced that he is working on a stimulus package that could be as large as $1 trillion,” notes BizRadio host Daniel Frishberg in The MoneyMan Report.

“This money would be used on infrastructure. Items such as new roads, bridges, etc. would be on the ‘to do list.’

“The theory is that this would bring jobs and thus help stimulate the economy. On this news, many of the infrastructure companies rallied. These are the same companies that have been severely beaten up due to global growth slowing.

“Thus, with a new stimulus package focused on infrastructure spending imminent, not only in the U.S. but some emerging countries, we are using some of our cash to invest in various infrastructure companies.

“We are purchasing Fluor Corp. (NYSE: FLR). This is a global engineering firm that will be a huge beneficiary from all the infrastructure spending.

“Even though the stock has recovered the last few weeks, it is still down over 50% from its high. Given their prospects and valuation, we believe this is a great company to invest in at present levels.

“We are also purchasing KBR, Inc. (NYSE: KBR). The company was spun off from Halliburton and they focus on engineering & construction. KBR gets a lot of their sales from contracts in Iraq and other countries.

“The stock fell 75% before recovering somewhat. However, the stock is still down 63% in the last 12 months and we believe the prospects for their business are excellent.”

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.

Obama’s to-do list: Bridges and roads originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Sat, 20 Dec 2008 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Earnings reports, Forecasts, Walgreen Co (WAG), CVS Corp (CVS), Rite Aid Corp (RAD)

Walgreen (NYSE: WAG), a major drugstore chain whose enemies include CVS Caremark (NYSE: CVS) and Rite-Aid (NYSE: RAD), is getting ready to report earnings for its first fiscal quarter on Monday, December 22. It’s Christmas week. Will Walgreen bestow a gift of an earnings beat upon the market?

One thing’s for sure: the market does not expect much from the drugstore. Wall Street expects flat performance in Q1. The bottom line should come in somewhere around $0.46 per share, the exact same amount that was booked last year. You know, you figure the company should be able to at least match expectations when the bar is set so low. But it might be tough. We all need access to prescriptions and over-the-counter medications every now and then, and on top of that, many people obviously require long-term drug regimens. So, we can see that the pharmacy part of the equation is somewhat resistant to recession. However, there isn’t a pressing need for all the non-pharmacy items in a Walgreen location. You don’t need to buy any of those cheap plastic toys, any of those blenders that don’t work too well, any of the overpriced groceries, etc. This is where Walgreen has exposure to the weakening consumer. Indeed, the consumer is becoming more and more of a value Grinch as time goes on. People just don’t want to pay any more than they have to.

Continue reading Earnings preview: Will Walgreen’s Q1 be healthy or ailing?

Earnings preview: Will Walgreen’s Q1 be healthy or ailing? originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Sat, 20 Dec 2008 16:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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California has quickly turned into a case study for the long-term effects of the housing market. The state, which ranks as the eighth largest economy in the world, found itself in a state of quiet desperation when the credit crunch took effect in October. California had already delayed its yearly budget over 80 days, finally settling on an agreement in September. In October, Arnold Schwarzenegger, the state’s governor (my state, I might add), announced he would be seeking billions of dollars from short-term loans and bond-sales to finance such basic costs as payroll expenditures.

Two months later, the state has announced that it is considering making payments to contractors, food-services companies and other state vendors in the form of warrants paying a 5% interest rate on the principal amount. That’s right. Whatever money that California has been able to raise over the past months has only been enough to pay its most immediate bills, forcing it to issue the equivalent of IOU’s to the state’s other service providers. The state has admitted that it may run out of necessary cash as early as March.

California is, of course, only 1 of 50 states in the United States. Yet it represents 13% of the housing market, and it is contributing 19% of foreclosures in the housing market to the United States economy. Couple that with a low property tax rate (among other things) that ranges between 3.6 and 6.5% and does not contribute any funding to the actual state budget (only local and county), and you are presented with a rather ugly picture. Schwarzenegger has made it clear that he would seek federal aid if the budget situation does not improve, painting a picture of a possible bailout for the state.

Adding to its woes, California also has the highest rate of unemployment of any state in the nation. That rate, at last count, is currently sitting at a 14-year high of 8.2%. The provides ample support for those calling for a further downturn in California’s economy, as disposable income for consumers rapidly evaporates, driving business activity downward, causing further reduced tax revenue for the state. It sounds ugly, and clearly it is.

I live in California, specifically in the inland area that has been hit hardest by the sub-prime crisis. California is chock-full of tremendously wealthy individuals and families, but the gap between income groups is growing more and more apparent as the financial crisis continues. Lower income families and individuals are driven to spend as though they earn as much as the wealthy, perhaps due to the ubiquitous presence of Hollywood. Even our governor, after all, is a movie star. Yet when your state finds itself bereft of funding, all the sheen and charisma in the world won’t help.

The trouble is, with the employment picture growing increasingly dire, it is entirely possible that California will not be the only state to find itself asking for handouts. Socialist programs may be extended beyond the corporate welfare policies our government has been experimenting with since the Bear Stearns bailout, and could finally include we-the-taxpayers. And yet it’s funny how that doesn’t exactly excite me.

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Major movement, Earnings reports, Bad news, Industry, Options, Technical Analysis

TXRH logoTexas Roadhouse (NASDAQ: TXRH - option chain) shares are dropping today after the company reported a third-quarter profit of $8.6 million, or 12 cents per share, missing analysts’ estimates of 13 cents per share. TXRH also warned that earnings for 2008 will be flat with last year’s numbers.

It has been common wisdom that worried consumers won’t be spending their cash on casual dining until they feel more confident about the economy, and the flat full-year forecast from TXRH seems to add weight to that thesis. If you think this stock won’t be rising too far in the coming months, then it could be a good time to look at a bearish hedged play on TXRH.

This morning, TXRH opened at $6.91. So far today the stock has hit a low of $6.23 and a high of $6.96. As of 12:20, TXRH is trading at $6.21, down $0.93 (-13.0%). The chart for TXRH looks bearish and S&P gives TXRH its lowest 1 STARS (out of 5) strong sell ranking.

For a bearish hedged play on this stock, I would consider a December bear-call credit spread above the $7.50 range.

Continue reading Texas Roadhouse (TXRH) Q3 earnings show consumers staying away

BloggingStocksTexas Roadhouse (TXRH) Q3 earnings show consumers staying away originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Tue, 28 Oct 2008 12:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Option ARMs are arguably the most toxic mortgage product on the market.  I remember having this discussion with people many years ago.  Without fail, you would get someone throwing out the hypothetical unicorns in the sky case, “well what if you are a doctor with a side business and don’t want to document your income?  […]
Related Posts:
Option ARMs for Dummies: Why 4.5 Percent Mortgages Rates will do Absolutely Nothing for these Toxic Assets.
When will my home cost me an ARM and a leg?
The Housing Wave of the Future: Two Main Mortgage Tsunamis.
Stage Two of the Mortgage Collapse: $500 Billion in Pay Option ARMs Meet the Piper in 2008 with 60 Percent Being in California.
California Housing Prices: 3 Different Measures Showing Different Prices. Calibrating Housing Prices for California.

Option ARMs are arguably the most toxic mortgage product on the market.  I remember having this discussion with people many years ago.  Without fail, you would get someone throwing out the hypothetical unicorns in the sky case, “well what if you are a doctor with a side business and don’t want to document your income?  This product makes sense.”  Yet that is the exception and not the rule as we are now painfully learning.  I’m sure some of these people were sincere but the vast majority were simply delusional and licking their gluttonous chops for a fat commission.  Never were they looking out for the client.  To ease their conscience they tell themselves, “well at least I warned the client about the risks of the mortgage.”

These loans were setup for that unicorn pie in the sky scenario of the wealthy business owner who simply does not want to document income but instead, became the primary product for many brokers in states like California and Florida for those who needed that extra pinch of leverage to buy that over priced home.  Back in June of 2008 I wrote a detailed articled called:

Stage Two of the Mortgage Collapse: $500 Billion in Pay Option ARMs Meet the Piper in 2008 with 60 Percent Being in California.

In it I talk about the dangers of the option ARM mortgages.  I don’t think the article could have been clearer.  Many of you saw the CBS 60 Minutes piece this weekend.  I know because I have gotten a lot of e-mails regarding the piece:

60 minutes

*Click to read/watch segment

It is a good piece although late to the game.  Yet I give CBS credit because I have yet to see ABC or NBC have any substantive piece regarding this matter.  Last night I was wondering why there was a surge in traffic to the site around 6:00PM Pacific Standard Time and when I looked at the logs, I saw Google search queries of option ARM, Alt-A, and NINJA mortgages.  Ironically the query was pulling up articles some older than two years old while the CBS piece made it seem that this option ARM thing was new.  Seeing the traffic, I think many people are going to be caught off guard just like the initial stages of the subprime debacle.  These are the articles that were pulled up:

When will my home cost me an ARM and a leg? - October 12th, 2006

“As you can see, 2006 and 2007 will be peak years in terms of subprime and jumbo loans. Given that many of these loans have prepayment penalties many folks will not be able to refinance given the limitation inherent in the loans. The reason we have not seen the impact of the current ARM resets is that the real estate market has been hot. So hot in fact that even with a prepayment penalty many were able to cash out or even sell homes before facing the piper. This circular system keeps working until appreciation stops. Not only that, rates are much higher than they were in 2004. Keep in mind that most ARMs and interest only loans are pegged to short-term rates such as the LIBOR. Basically they go in tandem with the feds short-term rates.”

Ponzi Financing - The House that Credit Built. - October 24th, 2006

“This was the start of the Securities and Exchange Company (sound familiar?). The ironic thing was that Ponzi was losing money daily. The thing that kept him going? Debt. Basically he was paying out his investors with money that was coming in. In fact, so many people bought into the hype that widows were mortgaging their homes to get a piece of the action. When someone from Barron’s decided to examine Ponzi more closely, they realized that the company was completely unsustainable. They realized that 160 million postal coupons would need to be in circulation when only 27,000 were estimated to be in use. By August 13 Ponzi was under arrest. Even at this time, so many people had blind faith in Ponzi that they cried and held anger toward the officers who arrested him. They bought into the dream Ponzi was selling even though economically it had no basis in fundamentals.”

“”The following chart shows the percentage of Bay Area loans that were interest only or Option ARMs (know as negative amortization).”**

Year Interest Only Option Arm
2005 42.6% 29.1%
2004 43.7% 9.6%
2003 20.3% 0.8%
2002 12.0% 1.7%
2001 2.9% 1.6%”

Press Zero for Reset: Are we out of the Subprime Mess? - September 25th, 2007

option arm resets

“The solution to this, even though people do not want to hear this, is a market correction. This means that local income levels and the new tighter credit standards will dictate future housing prices. In some areas this means 10 percent drops while in others this can reach 50 percent or higher. Will this happen? The data is already pointing toward this. Even if property drops 30 percent over 5 years, combined with inflation adjustments this is close to a 50 percent drop. Some areas in Los Angeles are already seeing 20 percent adjustments year-over-year.”

Stage Two of the Mortgage Collapse: $500 Billion in Pay Option ARMs Meet the Piper in 2008 with 60 Percent Being in California. - June 14th, 2008

pay option arm resets

Many of these owners are going to be highly tempted to moonwalk away from their mortgages. Does Bank of American really want to assume this option ARM time bomb? They are scheduled to close their deal with Countrywide sometime in the third quarter yet I simply do not see how they avoid astronomical losses on the current mortgage portfolios and REO properties. Unless California suddenly goes into another bubble and prices start going up, we are in for a tough few years and the current California multi-billion dollar budget short fall isn’t pretty either. Keep in mind the California budget which has now been revised to a $17 billion short fall is going to force us to make some hard decisions. Either raise taxes to plug budget gaps or cut spending (aka jobs) and only increase the unemployment numbers and thus depress the economy further.

No matter how you slice it, California housing is going lower and pay Option ARMs will be the next crisis that will send the credit markets stumbling. You can bank on that.”

I bring these articles back to the forefront because nothing really has changed at its core.  The option ARM fiasco is going to be big especially for states like California and Florida.  Given that California is 12% of the nationwide GDP, this will impact the entire country to a certain degree.  In addition, you can see that this isn’t new.  Back in 2006 we saw problems.  In fact, I wrote an article back in 2006 about the wonderful Charles Ponzi which now has a modern day huckster who seems to have managed to outperform him by billions of dollars in Bernard Madoff.  Charles Ponzi operated in the Roaring 20s right before the Great Depression and here we have another character right in the midst of our own collapse.

I want to bring the option ARM issue up again because this will be a big (if not bigger) story than the subprime debacle.  In addition, we already know prime mortgages are now going bad but you haven’t seen anything until you see an option ARM recast in California.  I have.  A few people that I have talked to who were unfortunate enough to be placed in option ARMs are already geared up to stop making payments once their rates recast on their underwater homes.  They are not alone.

Let us now take a look at multiple charts produced regarding this major issue:

mortgage rate resets waves

option arm reset

arm resets

 60 Minutes used a similar chart to the first one.  What you’ll first notice is the subprime wave is essentially done.  That is why it was such a frustrating thing to hear people say that this economic collapse was a subprime problem.  No.  Subprime was merely the canary in the coal mine.  It went down first.  The amount of subprime loans made compared to the $50 trillion in global wealth that has disappeared actually looks like peanuts now.  I remember when I would write an article stating the stunning $35 billion a month in resets and thought to myself what an incredible number it was.  Now, $35 billion is a capital injection into a crony capitalist bank on a weekend after eating a Mr. Goodbar or posting a private Facebook message to your buddy saying, “the deal iz done!”

What is more important with the chart above is now you see a second wave coming.  The Alt-A and option ARM wave.  The problem is many of these loans are securitized outside of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  Short of the government becoming a default toxic mortgage dealer, these loans will recast starting in heavy numbers in early 2009.  California has over 50% of the pay option ARM market.  Take a look at the median prices in our sidebar and you’ll get an idea how that is going to play out.

arm recast option arm

arm reset rates

option arm payment increasing

These charts show how the recasting of loans will actually hurt borrowers on a montly level.  Not only will their payment jump, but it will jump significantly.  2009 will see the first flurry of recasts with many payments jumping up approximately 40%.  In 2010 payments are jumping up closer to 50%.  2011 and 2012 see payments jump up in some cases by 80%!  My gut tells me upwards of 80% of all underwater pay option ARMs in California will default.  Bookmark it like the other articles linked above.  And why wouldn’t they default?  Prices are not going to jump up.  If IndyMac is any sign of loan modification success, we already know over 50% re-defaulted within 6 months.  And IndyMac was an option ARM specialist!  The market is only getting worse here in California and Florida, the 2 primary option ARM states.

option arm originations

The problem is that these toxic mortgages became mainstream and a large part of the market.  They were essentially ticking time bombs betting that real estate would appreciate at levels it could never maintain.  2, 3, and even 5 year teaser rates.  Well, look at the above chart.  2004, 2005, and 2006 were the biggest years.  Like clockwork they are exploding.  The only problem is that they are turning sour when the market is already battered.  Sadly, option ARMs provide very few options to those now stuck with them.

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Post from: Dr. Housing Bubble Blog

Option ARM: No one saw it Coming According to the Mainstream Media. The Alt-A and Pay Option ARM Tsunami Quickly Approaches. Charting the Option ARM and Alt-A Wave.

Related Posts:
Option ARMs for Dummies: Why 4.5 Percent Mortgages Rates will do Absolutely Nothing for these Toxic Assets.
When will my home cost me an ARM and a leg?
The Housing Wave of the Future: Two Main Mortgage Tsunamis.
Stage Two of the Mortgage Collapse: $500 Billion in Pay Option ARMs Meet the Piper in 2008 with 60 Percent Being in California.
California Housing Prices: 3 Different Measures Showing Different Prices. Calibrating Housing Prices for California.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

(A guest post from Constantine von Hoffman, veteran business journalist and author of the blog CollateralDamage.biz, a satirical look at marketing and business.)

Last weekend saw Office Depot & KBToys join the ranks of Circuit City, Linens ‘n Things  and Mervyn’s and other bankrupt retailers. The rush of companies liquidating their inventory after going out of business is adding more deflationary pressure on the economy. As FinancialArmageddon notes:

One of the feature that defines a deflationary downturn is the expanding array of sellers. You don’t just have the usual crowd who are looking to make a profit or to get rid of something they already own so they can buy something else. You also see more and more individuals and firms who have to sell because they don’t have enough cash on hand to meet their needs; lenders who end up with something they don’t want because borrowers have defaulted on their obligations; people who are worried about their job prospects or other concerns who want to be more liquid; and others who simply get caught up in the spirit of the times.

This all spurs a hesitation to buy things among companies and individuals as they wait and see if prices will get even cheaper. (This headline from the BBC – US inflation falls still further — begs the question, how far does inflation have to fall before the press is willing to call it something else?)

I suspect we will see a similar thing soon in mortgage refinancing. As the prime drops ever lower, people are going to wait to see how low an interest rate they can get. For those thinking the prime being at 1% can only get a little lower — well let’s hope so. The once unimaginable case of the prime going negative — that is paying institutions to borrow money in the hopes that they will lend it to others — is now far less unimaginable. (I’m not holding my breath on this, I’m just suggesting that the idea is no longer totally impossible.)

Sadly for me and other consumers, our loan rates probably won’t go down. According to Bankrate.com, the national average rate for a 48-month new-car loan stood Monday at 6.8 percent, and 7.07 percent for a 36-month used-car loan. As Kevin Hall writes:

What those numbers mean for consumers is this: Banks are willing to lend only at a premium, even after the Bush administration’s $700 billion Wall Street rescue plan directed billions to banks in a bid to spark the economy through new lending. That means the plan isn’t working.

Thank you, Kevin.

Also average humans like us aren’t getting much when we loan our money to institutions: Current highest 1 year CD rate is around 3.7%.  Suddenly muni bonds — AAA insured 10 year — at 4.2% look like a great idea. Maybe not as safe as T-bills, but not bad and a lot better return ( 10 year T-bills are currently going for 2.49%, a number I expect to drop into the negatives). And if these suckers go under the system is so screwed that T-bills won’t help either.

Source [blownmortgage]

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