Archive for August 14th, 2009

Filed under: Stocks to Buy

I’m Reiterating my Buy rating for 3M Co. (NYSE: MMM), first recommended on April 20, 2009 at a price of $51.97. If you purchased MMM at that time, you’re up a solid 37%.

Back in April, I argued, among other factors, that a strong case for buying 3M’s shares could be made based on the company’s strong free cash flow, net return on capital, and reasonable P/E (the about 11), before everyone else jumped on the bandwagon.

Continue reading With 3M, it’s probably now or never for an outsized gain

With 3M, it’s probably now or never for an outsized gain originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 14 Aug 2009 15:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Stocks to Buy

I’m Reiterating my Buy rating for 3M Co. (NYSE: MMM), first recommended on April 20, 2009 at a price of $51.97. If you purchased MMM at that time, you’re up a solid 37%.

Back in April, I argued, among other factors, that a strong case for buying 3M’s shares could be made based on the company’s strong free cash flow, net return on capital, and reasonable P/E (the about 11), before everyone else jumped on the bandwagon.

Continue reading With 3M, it’s probably now or never for an outsized gain

With 3M, it’s probably now or never for an outsized gain originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 14 Aug 2009 15:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Loan modifications and mortgage refinancing are the hot subject of the moment in the financial world. This is no surprise when there are around 5 million homeowners facing foreclosure with or without the government’s aid and 9 million without it. This “need” has opened a practically brand new market for financial consultants looking for a niche to work in. In a matter of months a new industry was born providing help and advice to save our homes and consolidate our debts while reducing our monthly payments.

Unfortunately some companies and individuals have taken advantage of this new industry to target desperate home owners that in their need to lower their monthly expenses are vulnerable to scams.

The government is trying its best to reduce the increase in foreclosures. That is a good thing because according to the Center for Responsible Living a new foreclosure is filed every 13 seconds. Of course the government doesn’t appreciate it when private companies and consultants pull down the modest advances they are making by duping home owners into fraudulent contracts and outright scams.

The latest and most scandalous case occurred yesterday when Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo announced that his office had filed a lawsuit against American Modification Agency, Inc. (Amerimod) one the biggest foreclosure rescue companies in the country, and its owner Salvatore Pane, Jr.

The lawsuit accuses Amerimod and its owner of deception, false advertising and deception of homeowners in risk of foreclosure. The investigation into Amerimod disclosed that while the company claimed to modify the mortgages of desperate homeowners close to foreclosure did not only fail to fulfill its promises but actually added to their financial woes by throwing them deeper into debt. Amerimod would routinely charge up-front fees for services they had not carried out. They exaggerated their loan modification success rate and underestimated the time required to modify the loan.

The lawsuit also accuses Amerimod of failing to include the legally required disclosures in the customer contracts. What is even worse is that the company regularly provided terrible financial advice to its customers, like suggesting they stop making mortgage payments to their lender. They would also target Spanish speakers with Spanish speaking salespeople but once it came to contract signing they would not provide Spanish contracts.

The lawsuit hopes to close down the loan modification company and compensate Amerimod customers that were charged illegal up-front fees and fell for their hollow promises.

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modification Consultants sued for scamming desperate home owners.
  2. Free Home Loan Modification Help For Homeowners
  3. Mortgage Modification Crackdown: Operation Loan Lies

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modification Consultants sued for scamming desperate home owners.
  2. Free Home Loan Modification Help For Homeowners
  3. Mortgage Modification Crackdown: Operation Loan Lies

Source [blownmortgage]


Mortgage Consultants that feed off desperate homeowners that are struggling with their monthly payments and risk foreclosure are becoming a priority for law enforcement agencies.
The Federal Trade Commission has recently started “Operation Loan Lies” a nationwide operation that involves 25 federal and state agencies. The goal is simple to shut down businesses that deceive homeowners by offering foreclosure rescue and mortgage modification services that don’t help but cost homeowners large sums in consultation and processing fees.
What are the results of Operation Loan Lies?
The Federal Trade Commission claims to have brought 14 cases, with the help of 23 state attorneys general and other law enforcement agencies, against 178 companies.
Even with the combined efforts of nationwide law enforcement agencies cracking down on mortgage modification conmen is going to be hard work. In a matter of months thousands of loan modification consultants appeared feeding off the millions of homeowners that risk foreclosure.
Unfortunately these conmen feed off the misconception that for profit companies that offer to reduce your debt and monthly payments will get better results than non profit government agencies.
What can we do to protect ourselves against the feeding frenzy of mortgage vultures?
Good information is your best weapon. As with all predators mortgage modification vultures will go for the weakest victim every time. Make yourself a hard target, ask questions, keep informed.
Having a quick checklist can help to avoid mortgage modification vultures. Avoid any company or consultant that:
1)    Wants to get paid before he or the company does anything. Not a good idea to pay someone before he does his job, it kind of takes away all incentive and is a basic tool for conmen.
2)    Say they can GUARANTEE they will stop your foreclosure and reduce your debt. Nobody can guarantee that because it is in the power of the bank not the loan modification company or you. If you do not pay your mortgage payments your mortgage will foreclose. Banks can accept workarounds, debt reductions and loan modifications but it is not a guarantee.
3)    Tell you to stop paying or communicating with your lender. You should never do this. Good communication with your lender is vital for a satisfactory debt reduction or loan modification. Conmen and fraudulent loan modification companies will ask you to stop communicating with your bank and let them deal with it all, while you pay their fees and they take your money with nothing to show for it.
Mortgage vultures can be avoided and government authorities are working hard to crackdown on this type of fraud that feeds off our weakest. Don’t become a victim, get smart and find quality counseling to avoid foreclosure. Surprisingly the best kind tends to be that which is free and offered by unbiased government institutions.

Related posts:

  1. Mortgage modification and 3 lies bad debt relief companies tell
  2. Loan Modification Consultants sued for scamming desperate home owners.
  3. Loan Modification Hall of Shame, How Bad Is Your Bank

Related posts:

  1. Mortgage modification and 3 lies bad debt relief companies tell
  2. Loan Modification Consultants sued for scamming desperate home owners.
  3. Loan Modification Hall of Shame, How Bad Is Your Bank

Source [blownmortgage]

The latest Case-Shiller Index data had its first nationwide price bump up in nearly three years.  I am astounded (but not shocked) by what this has done to the psychology of many.  The most recent post highlighting the REO shadow inventory and how banks are keeping homes off the public view instead of convincing people […]

The latest Case-Shiller Index data had its first nationwide price bump up in nearly three years.  I am astounded (but not shocked) by what this has done to the psychology of many.  The most recent post highlighting the REO shadow inventory and how banks are keeping homes off the public view instead of convincing people that housing has a tumultuous path ahead, the post actually reinforced a group of people that now think the worst is over.  Keep in mind the Case-Shiller data set for the LA/OC region is still declining.  Yet people are extrapolating nationwide data and transferring it over to the dismal state of California.  It may very well be the case that nationwide prices have hit a bottom but not for the mid and upper tier of California homes.  Price corrections are virtually assured with the coming onslaught of Alt-A toxic dubious mortgages coming in full force in 2010.

The argument keeps shifting so let me be extremely clear.  Some keep thinking that there will be some generalized and clean decline when the Alt-A loans implode.  They keep obsessing over tiny details in the market and say, “I thought the implosion was going to happen now!  Forget this, I’m jumping in.”  Many people are simply impatient and choose to ignore certain facts at their own convenience.  The same kind of reasoning occurred in 2006.  Even almighty Ben Bernanke shrugged off the housing problems and didn’t see a recession being set off by the housing bubble.  Housing in California will be in trouble for years to come.  The distress market data tells us that.  Yet if you use the median price as your indicator, you will be completely off.  In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised to see the median price increase as the mid and upper tier markets implode…simultaneously.

How can this be?  Simply put, for the past year the bulk of the sales have occurred in the lower priced cities.  Of course, the median price is principally concerned with volume and the volume has been with the low hanging fruit.  Many in the mid to upper tier did not sell and still had prices at delusional levels so the volume at the mid to upper tier simply did not make a dent in the overall data.  But now, we are seeing sales in these areas with more modest price cuts.  Ironically, with more volume in these areas and the lower end working through its funk, prices may increase in terms of the median price.  Let me give you a really simple example.  Take a home in Pasadena.  The hypothetical home might have sold for $700,000 during the peak but now will fetch $500,000.  The homeowner bought for $300,000 so they still stand to profit.  Life occurs (i.e., new job, divorce, etc) and they need to sell.  The home moves for $500,000.  Do this many times over and you can understand why you are seeing the median price in Southern California increase:

socal median price counties

I think this is what is catching many people off guard.  The median price for Southern California has been steady since January of 2009 and has increased in the last two months.  You need to understand why this is occurring however.  Given our previous example, you can understand that the home can sell for $400,000 or even $350,000 and the owner still will profit and the overall median price for the region will have more fuel to go up.  And the Case-Shiller Index would increase in this case as well because it uses repeat home sales over time.  The Alt-A implosion will force the hand of many banks to off load homes in these kinds of scenarios.  So if you are looking at the region median price, we may have already bottomed.  But make sure we are talking about the same kind of dynamics.

But let us look at the nationwide picture first.  It helps to look at the entire U.S. housing market.  Many of you sent the report from Deutsche Bank AG which stated that 48% of mortgage holders will be underwater by 2011.  Interesting point since I have been saying for over a year that California will hit a housing bottom in 2011. Yet how extreme is this contention?

united state home with mortgages

The above chart includes data from multiple sources including the Census Bureau, Deutsche Bank, and Moody’s.  It helps to have it all in one spot to analyze.  First, a couple of facts from the chart above.  Some 31% of homeowners have no mortgage.  Next, as things stand today some 16 million homeowners are underwater meaning they owe more than their home is worth and another 5 million have zero equity or a few percent in equity (which is irrelevant if you consider selling costs of 5 to 6 percent).  The bottom line is some 21 million Americans already have negative equity or will have no equity in the coming months.  What Deutsche Bank is predicting is we will have 25.8 million people with negative equity by 2011 which makes up about half of homeowners with a mortgage.  Some see this as some mega epic doomer call.  I don’t see it that way.  The argument they present is that more issues will start occurring with prime mortgages (the data backs this up) since unemployment will stay elevated for sometime thus pushing up foreclosures.  And right on time Fannie Mae announces another stunning loss this time to the tune of $14.8 billion.  Keep in mind that most of the GSE stuff is supposedly prime paper.  We are still running at record high foreclosures rates by the way:

nationwide foreclosures

Nothing will push a home price lower than a foreclosure.  And people forget about the impact that foreclosures have in an area.  They force comp values lower so appraisers start valuing homes lower in general.  I know some in the real estate industry hate this since they only think housing values go up but this is the reality.  And with the Alt-A loans largely being based out of California, there is little reason to think that the mid and upper tier markets in the state will stabilize (the average balance is $440,000):

alt-a-loans-active-in-state

And for what it is worth, Deutsche Bank was early in calling subprime problems so I do give them some credit in their analysis.  But you say California is different right?  Well let us look into the California housing situation:

california housing

Of those homes with a mortgage in the chart above, 33 percent are estimated to be underwater by Moody’s.  I would estimate a much higher number given the persistent delusion by many in the mid to upper tier areas.  They somehow look at the Alt-A data and think that it will be swept under the rug as if it was a small amount of dirt.  That is not the case.  If you look at the above data, we now have more people underwater than people that have paid off their mortgage in California!  Also, there is nothing wrong with renting in the state given that nearly as many people rent as those with a mortgage.  And by the way, with the absurd loan modifications extending loans out to 40-years many homeowners that bought at the peak are basically realizing they have it worse than renters.  A renter can pick up and leave.  They cannot.  Unless they strategically default and stop making payments which many are electing to do but will ruin their credit.

The above implications are rather clear to someone that has been following the California housing market for a decade and is also cognizant of its historical trends.  One key factor not being addressed however is housing affordability.  Clearly lower home prices will make prices more affordable - only if the assumption is based on a stable economy.  Yet what use is having more affordable home prices if the economy is firing people left and right?  And if you haven’t noticed, California’s economy with an 11.6 percent unemployment rate is still going up.  Some analysts estimate a 13 to 14 percent peak.  That is why when you look at what regions have underwater homeowners, you will also find economically depressed regions included with the bubble maniac states like Nevada and California:

underwater homeowners

There are two sides to the housing equation.  First is the home price and second involves the local economy.  This is simple to understand.  Michigan has incredibly cheap housing prices.  Heck, I’ve seen some homes going for $1 to $100 simply because the local governments want someone paying some property tax and maintenance for the home.  So the price is fine since you can’t get cheaper than $1.  Yet the second part of the equation is a disaster.  Employment is in shambles.  What use is it living in a gigantic cheap home if you have no job in the area?  And we are a social bunch.  You might think it prudent for you to live in your cheap mansion but what of your friends or family?  You’ll need something else to do instead of sitting in your big empty home counting your cash while those around you struggle financially.  That is why plans like those for Flint are openly talking about demolishing parts of towns.  Like a Phoenix rising from the ashes except those ashes will be cemented over in a housing graveyard.

California has one of the highest unemployment rates in the country.  We have the bulk of those toxic Alt-A loans which include the tasty option ARM variety.  For this entire decade, most of the new high paying jobs revolved around the real estate industry in the state.  Short of us having another bubble, that industry is gone forever.  So what is going to replace that function in the equation?  What is incredible is even after the major price adjustments, housing in California is still unaffordable.  People say, “look at that $100,000 home in the Inland Empire” while failing to realize the near 20 percent unemployment rate in some cities in that area.  The California is different argument held water when our economy was booming.  That argument holds no water in a state with a $26 billion budget deficit and is chopping services left and right.

For many, the American dream of homeownership has become a nightmare.  It really is too bad.  Private property ownership has worked well for our country.  I would argue that it is an important part of the stability of our economy over the last fifty years.  Yet the perverse crony real estate industry tag teamed with Wall Street and decided to transform this once boring industry into a casino on the backs of the American public.  Forget about long-term stability when you can sacrifice it all for short-term gain.  They now openly chide the American public since they did after all sign on the bottom line while at the same time they are taking money from the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury.  It is the ultimate hypocrisy.  I believe that those homeowners that overleveraged themselves should lose their homes.  That is why I am adamant against using taxpayer money for loan modifications especially when they are designed more to protect the banks.  I am even more adamant about letting those lenders who participated in this mess to fail.  Too bad during the earlier days of this crisis we didn’t reward prudent lenders with taxpayer money since they were the ones who demonstrated how to actually conduct banking.  Instead, the money flowed to the most culpable in creating this mess.

So don’t be fooled about this short-term delusion.  Has the freefall stopped?  Sure.  But that doesn’t imply a robust recovery is around the corner (the stock market rallying 50 percent since the March low believes in the “V” shaped recovery).  What industry is going to make up for the lost financial and real estate jobs?  How much home can you afford while working a service job?  The fact that we have 21 million Americans with negative equity or zero or little equity is simply astounding.

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Post from: Dr. Housing Bubble Blog

Rich Dad, Underwater Dad: 21 Million Homeowners with Negative Equity or No Equity in Their Homes. 33 Percent of California Mortgages Underwater.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

Filed under: Marketing and advertising

Shares of GSI Commerce (NASDAQ: GSIC), an e-commerce and online marketing services company, fell by over a dollar a share on news of a stock offering priced at $17 per share.

The proposed underwriting of 3.7 million new shares will help the company raise $59 million. Existing shareholders, including Softbank Capital Partners, plan to sell and additional 8.2 million shares for proceeds of $139 million.

GSI Commerce was among the most active small-cap stocks in Thursday’s trading. At mid-day, the stock was down 6% on heavy volume of over four million shares, well ahead of the average daily volume of 350,000 shares.

Continue reading Stock offering sinks GSI Commerce

Stock offering sinks GSI Commerce originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 15:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Getting started, Johnson and Johnson (JNJ), United Parcel’B’ (UPS), Wells Fargo (WFC), Serious Money, Stocks to Buy, Best Stocks for 2009, Olin Corp. (OLN)

Money market accounts and certificates of deposit are safe, but they provide very little return on your investment. This fact, and the invigorated stock market, provoked one of my bankers, Dobrinka, at the local Santa Monica Wells Fargo branch, to ask for advice on how I would invest $25,000 if I was just starting out.

This is a common question although the starting point in terms of cash varies. It certainly makes a difference how old the person is, their general knowledge about investing and finance, and the particulars of their financial statement.

Here is what I suggested sticking to regular themes I have written about before and broadly speaking would be a conservative approach emphasizing safety, diversity, liquidity, dividends and the potential for growth far exceeding cash in the mattress or in a money market account. I also think that it is important for beginners to educate themselves so my suggestions include an educational aspect.

Continue reading Serious Money: What to do with $25,000

Serious Money: What to do with $25,000 originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 14:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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