Archive for August 22nd, 2009

Filed under: Earnings reports, ConAgra Foods (CAG), Kraft Foods’A’ (KFT)

The J.M. Smucker Company (NYSE: SJM), a food manufacturer famous for its jelly and baking products, reported a great first quarter on Friday. Adjusted earnings per share increased 12% to 92 cents. According to Reuters, management was able to beat expectations by a whopping 12 cents.

This is quite impressive given the fact that an analyst quoted by Reuters believes that more people eating at home are helping to fuel Smucker’s success. I say this because, if people are deciding to dine at home more often, they are most likely doing so because of the recession.

Continue reading J.M. Smucker kills estimates in Q1

J.M. Smucker kills estimates in Q1 originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Sat, 22 Aug 2009 09:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: Earnings reports, Gap Inc (GPS), Abercrombie and Fitch (ANF), American Eagle Outfitters (AEO)

Aeropostale (NYSE: ARO), a retailer that competes with Abercrombie & Fitch (NYSE: ANF), American Eagle Outfitters (NYSE: AEO), and Gap (NYSE: GPS), posted what I thought was a superb second-quarter earnings summary on Thursday after the bell. The figures were very appealing, and I would’ve expected a better after-hours reaction by the stock to the news. Then again, the market can never be predicted. It will do whatever the heck it wants.

Net sales increased 20%. Not bad, am I right? Wait, check this out. Earnings per share came in at 57 cents, compared to the 31 cents reported in the year-ago quarter. According to Reuters, that was a penny ahead of expectations. But that penny beat on the bottom line isn’t what impresses me the most. It’s the strong per-share profit expansion that I find compelling.

Continue reading Aeropostale posts a sharp increase in Q2 profit

Aeropostale posts a sharp increase in Q2 profit originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 21 Aug 2009 13:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: Products and services, Consumer experience, Competitive strategy, Starbucks (SBUX)

The indefatigable Starbucks (NASDAQ: SBUX) has made another strategic business decision … it has decided to raise the price for some beverages and reduce the cost for others.

What is the line of demarcation? Complexity. Drinks that take more of a barista’s time to make (such as Frappuccinos) will now be priced 10 to 30 cents higher, while simple drip coffee and lattes will be priced 5 to 15 cents lower.

Continue reading Good news, bad news: Starbucks adjusts drink prices

Good news, bad news: Starbucks adjusts drink prices originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 21 Aug 2009 12:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Mortgage crisis is hitting families hard all over the country with the devastating effects of a hurricane, destroying homes, affecting household economies and causing general havoc nationwide. As with all natural and human disasters everybody has a view of how to solve the situation. Some say the current crisis is nothing special, a normal depression after a market bubble where people got greedy and invested badly and that if the market is left to itself it will sort things out.
Others are of the opinion that the government must intervene with taxpayer’s money to bail out desperate homeowners and at the same time jump start the economy. Pretty much everyone disagrees on how the government should do this.

What many agree on is the seriousness of the situation. Recently President Obama said that “The American Dream is being tested by a home mortgage crisis that not only threatens the stability of our economy but also the stability of families and neighborhoods.”

One solution the government is investing strongly in is loan modifications. This program provides financial advice and aid to families struggling to pay their monthly mortgage payments. The plan is designed to reduce monthly payments and incentivize regular payments. To enroll in this mortgage plan homeowners must start with a three month trial. If during the three month trial all payments are made on time then they receive a cash bonus that is used to reduce the principal of the loan. After the trial period the government continues to pay an incentive to homeowners that are regular on their payments which can reduce their principal by $5,000 in three years.

This program is offered through Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) which is backed by $75 billion to be used to encourage and aid the loan modification program.

What are the results up-to-date?

By now there are 230,000 modifications that have already been started and the goal for November is to reach 270,000. It is interesting to note that in 2008 only 42% of the modifications by the largest servicers lowered homeowner’s monthly payments. However since March 4 with the help of the HAMP program all borrowers that receive a loan modification have seen their monthly payments reduced. This is a nice change, good news among the pages and pages of bad news that inundate our screens.  However it is sometimes good to understand a situation well even thought it might be bad news in order to make the best of the bad situation.

Although Loan Modifications are being presented as the be all and end all of the current Mortgage crisis, the truth is that only a small percentage of homeowners in trouble actually qualify for a loan modification. According to the website LoanModExposed.com  only 2 percent of homeowners qualify under current parameters.

It is therefore important to understand the qualifications and apply properly because a successful loan modification can reduce the principal balance (the amount you borrow and are paying interest on) reduce the interest rate and change the rate from variable to fixed and many other efficient modifications.

Related posts:

  1. Mortgage Modifications Drop But Mortgage Workouts Rise in HOPE
  2. Loan Modifications, The Truth Behind The Spin
  3. Avoid Foreclosure, There Is Always HOPE

Related posts:

  1. Mortgage Modifications Drop But Mortgage Workouts Rise in HOPE
  2. Loan Modifications, The Truth Behind The Spin
  3. Avoid Foreclosure, There Is Always HOPE

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Analyst reports, Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Analyst initiations

Analyst upgrades:

  • Merriman upgraded Sunpower (NASDAQ: SPWRA) two levels to Buy from Sell after transitioning coverage. The firm believes Sunpower is emerging from the current recession as the CleanTech leader and has a $38-$48 price range on shares.
  • Citigroup upgraded Varian Medical (NYSE: VAR) to Buy from hold as it believes capex pressure and health care reform uncertainty is priced into shares, and demand will return as hospital budgets stabilize. Citi raised its target on shares to $45 from $36.
  • FBR Capital upgraded Gap (NYSE: GPS) to Outperform from Market Perform following the Q2 results to reflect product improvement and ongoing inventory control. The firm raised its target on shares to $24 from $18.
  • Schnitzer Steel (NASDAQ: SCHN) was upgraded to Neutral from Sell at UBS.
  • UDR Inc. (NYSE: UDR) was upgraded to Market Perform from Underperform at Wells Fargo.
  • The Buckle (NYSE: BKE) was upgraded to Buy from Hold at Roth Capital.

Continue reading Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: DKS, GPS, NFLX, SPWRA, TIF …

Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: DKS, GPS, NFLX, SPWRA, TIF … originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 21 Aug 2009 11:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The South Bay of Los Angeles in its broadest definition includes all cities south of the 105 freeway and places west of Long Beach.  It includes places like Manhattan Beach, Hermosa Beach, and today’s Real Home of Genius city Redondo Beach.  Now I know today people are jumping up left and right like a kid […]

The South Bay of Los Angeles in its broadest definition includes all cities south of the 105 freeway and places west of Long Beach.  It includes places like Manhattan Beach, Hermosa Beach, and today’s Real Home of Genius city Redondo Beach.  Now I know today people are jumping up left and right like a kid juiced up on sugary drinks because existing home sales have increased.  This headline is plastered all over the mainstream media.  But did you also know that the median sales price fell 15.1 percent last year to the current median sale price of $178,400?  Oh, and distressed sales accounted for 31 percent of all existing homes sold.  What you should get from this is simple.  Cheaper prices will drive sales even with conventional 30 year mortgages.  It’s all about price.

Nationwide it is likely we have bottomed in terms of sales.  But as we have discussed many times there will be two bottoms and one of those may have been reached:

home-sales-us

The other bottom comes in the form of price and that still has a way to go.  The shadow inventory will keep pressure on housing prices especially in shady regions like California.  There seems to be a growing divide in terms of how things are now going to play out.  Some are arguing that the Alt-A and option ARM products are a tiny event and those waiting for a second flood of foreclosures will be surprised.  Their argument is banks will simply keep these homes off their books and will slowly trickle inventory into the market like some form of intravenous medicine drip.  They may be right but so much shadow inventory is building that at a certain point, something will have to give.  The only thing we can do at this point is look at the data and try to come up with an estimate of where we are heading.

My take on why something will have to give is this.  In Southern California we concluded that there were 40,000 REO properties in the dark shadows.  These are homes with no mortgage payment coming in.  As we all know, many of these notes are chopped up like hamburger and are beholden to various contractual agreements with investors.  Do you think investors are happy receiving no income stream?  My take is many of these banks are playing financial brinkmanship and are trying to hold their breath long enough to dump this stuff off to the government (aka public) and the public private investment program (PPIP) is one of those vehicles to perform this transaction.  In fact, that is why I have heard numerous stories of people not getting a notice of default from 6 to 12 months!  We already know that foreclosures are at record highs and rising:

notice of defaults

The assumption that banks can hold this stuff indefinitely is wrong for a variety of reasons including banks have extremely low capital.  This will drain them further.  But they can’t sell because they will collapse since the market is moving with cheaper prices (i.e., see Friday’s existing home sales).  If we allow this to go on we have learned absolutely nothing from Japan and will repeat a lost decade here in the U.S.  And the proof is already occurring!  If we leave it up to the banks to determine policy, they would hold this stuff off forever while coming back to the government cheese each and every year until this is all worked out.  As you can see on a nationwide basis, if you set the price right people will buy.  Yet banks have no incentive to sell because they will implode as they should.  Even now, as the FDIC reaches a breaking point with its reserve insurance fees are going higher across the board and good banks are now subsidizing weak and irresponsible banks.  This story I’m sure is sounding very familiar to most of you.

At a certain point, there will need to be transparency in this market.  Just because it happens doesn’t mean they will flood the market with these properties but the public will be flooded with data.  Some think that the argument means that one day, a banking CEO is going to say, “hey, today is a nice sunny day.  I’m going to put 6,000 REOs on the MLS before I go eat some tacos.”  It doesn’t work that way.  But you can’t have no cash flow from properties and hold them off indefinitely.  That is how banks imploded in the first place!  The cash flow ran out.  People stopped paying.

Now assume the government assumes all the Alt-A and option ARM products on to their books.  Then what?  All you did was shifted the risk.  You still have over valued assets and the only thing that happened is you passed the hot potato to the public.  At a certain point there will need to be price discovery.  You can only have price discovery by putting these homes on the market.  Otherwise you follow Japan down the path of a lost decade because you will have these zombie banks and loans just eating tax brains forever.  Yes, I know we aren’t like Japan because we don’t save, we aren’t homogenous, and every other pretext.  But we are like them in this regard if this is the path we follow.  Is there a different result if a Japanese and American man jump off the Grand Canyon?

Let us now focus on our overpriced home.  Today we salute you Redondo Beach with our Real Home of Genius Award.

Redondo Beach - 668 Square Feet 1 Bedroom Home for $539,000?  Is this 2006?

redondo beach

The South Bay is one of those regions where people think nothing can happen to housing prices.  They assume every city is somehow Manhattan Beach or Rancho Palos Verdes.  They are not.  Redondo Beach is one of those areas.  Depending on which zip code of the two you focus on, Redondo Beach is either doing well or contracting:

90277:   Median Price ($989,000) Up 16.4% year over year

90278:   Median Price ($686,00)  Down 7.7% year over year

Our home today is in the 90277 zip code.  If you are wondering what a million dollar neighborhood looks like in an inflated market, this is a perfect example.  But before I dig deeper into the data on this home, I want to focus on the monthly nut phenomenon.  This also helps to explain why people were so willing to take on Alt-A and option ARM loans even though the principal was simply a ridiculous amount.  What people are missing is that the monthly Southern California buyer is now taking on a monthly mortgage amount that is now resembling the average amount from a decade ago!  Did you get?  The average monthly nut now looks like the monthly nut from 2000.  Let us look at two sample months and what you will see is a clear indication of where we are heading:

socal-two-months-data

This chart probably tells you everything you need to know.  Riverside and San Bernardino Counties, the Inland Empire, are now at prices that date back one decade.  If you are buying in these areas, you probably will find good deals.  However, if you look at the other counties they are still largely overpriced.  Los Angeles is up 58% from a decade ago, OC is up 47%, and the other counties of San Diego and Ventura are overpriced as well.  Yet if we look at the total sales for the region, we are virtually at the same point as in October of 2000.  And the irony is the typical monthly payment is now even with that from 10 years ago.  So something has to give here.  Either prices in the higher priced regions decline to meet the monthly nut or the monthly payment will have to jump.  And just take a look at what Southern Californians were taking out on a monthly average during the bubble:

monthly-nut

At the height of the insanity, Southern Californians were taking out an average $2,500 mortgage payment.  No taxes, insurance, or maintenance either.  Just your principal and interest (assuming you paid interest which many didn’t on option ARMs).  Now that we are actually checking for income and using debt-to-income ratios people can’t afford gigantic mortgages.  Remember during this decade incomes have been stagnant.  And now, if you didn’t notice on Friday California released the unemployment rate and in another stunner, the unemployment rate jumped up to another record of 11.9 percent putting the U-6 rate over 22 percent:

california unemployment

Hard to buy a home without an income.  But this home in Redondo Beach brings back memories of those 500 square foot shacks going for $500,000.  This home has a housing bubble history like you wouldn’t believe.  Let us look at what a 668 square foot home can do during a bubble:

Sales History

3/31/2000:          $273,000

7/20/2006:          $680,000

12/23/2008:        $431,000

And the current list price is get this…$539,000!  Bwahahahahaha!  Someone is trying to flip in California even with an unemployment rate of approximately 12 percent and housing imploding!  Real Home of Genius quality indeed.  I love this part in the ad:

“Sunny property surrounded by million dollar homes. Perfect second home, first home or private home. Walk to the beach, shopping and restaurants. It is darling, very special and can grow.”

Surrounded by “million” dollar homes?  Let us take a look:

area

Zillow doesn’t seem to think so and their pricing algorithm has been generous in California.  That $1.3 million home is 4 bedrooms and 3 baths on 2,614 square feet by the way, in Redondo Beach.  You are at least six blocks away from the beach.  Let us look at some of the pricing action here:

Price Reduced: 06/11/09 — $569,900 to $550,000
Price Reduced: 07/29/09 — $550,000 to $539,000

Now think about this.  $539,000 for a 1 bedroom 668 square foot home that was originally built in 1920!  Before the Great Depression!  One thing is for sure, your monthly nut is going to be much more than the current average of $1,180 for Southern California.

Today we salute you Redondo Beach with our Real Homes of Genius Award.

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Post from: Dr. Housing Bubble Blog

Real Homes of Genius: The South Bay of Los Angeles. Today we Salute Redondo Beach. 668 Square Feet 1 Bedroom Home for $539,000. California Unemployment now at 11.9 Percent Officially with U-6 at 22 Percent.

Via [DrHousingBubble]


We live in the age of information. That is good and it is bad. It is good because you can get information from a great variety of sources and have the choice of seeing the world from a number of perspectives. The bad news is that you really need to get your information from a variety of sources because it is hard to know who to trust or who got the story right.

An example of this occurred last Wednesday when we received conflicting reports. The Mortgage Bankers Association said mortgage loan applications were up 16.1% for the week ending August 7 in relation to the same week last year. This news item seemed feasible because there has been an increase in the home sales in the second quarter in 39 states.  Other figures also seemed to support this with mortgage refinancing accounting for 52.3% OF mortgage applications and adjustable rate mortgage applications also rose by 0.4%.

On the other hand, Reuters saw the situation in a completely different light by focusing on a different perspective of the situation.  Reuters looked at  a week over week seasonally adjusted  decline of 3.5% which is not exactly the good news the Mortgage Bankers Association reported.  Reuters cites the increase in interest rates as the reason for the drop coupled with the current 9.4% unemployment rate which is keeping homebuyers shy and cautions because of the economic climate.

So who is right? Are mortgage rates rising or dropping? The answer is that both are right, they just are focusing on different data to express their opinion. It is left to you to decide what argument is more compelling.

The Mortgage Bankers Association chose to compare this last week with the same week last year while Reuters analyzed the behavior of the market week over week.

To illustrate how this can affect our view of the situation look at these mortgage figures. The Mortgage Bankers Association reported that the cost to borrow on a 30 year fixed rate at 5.38% a rise of 0.21 percentage from the previous week. The lowest interest rate or cost to purchase a mortgage hit an all time low of 4.61% in the end  of March. If you look at these figures it does seem like things are going rather badly and that the Mortgage Market is falling.
However if you compare this week’s interest rate with last year’s in the same week you see that last year the 30 year fixed rate mortgage was a the hair rising rate of 6.57%! A far cry from the 5.38% we now have.

So are we rising or falling? We are both it just depends what point of reference you choose.

Related posts:

  1. Mortgage Applications Fall as Interest Rates Rise
  2. Mortgage applications off 10% from same time last year
  3. Mortgage loan applications & rates increase

Related posts:

  1. Mortgage Applications Fall as Interest Rates Rise
  2. Mortgage applications off 10% from same time last year
  3. Mortgage loan applications & rates increase

Source [blownmortgage]

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