Archive for August 28th, 2009

Filed under: Stocks to Buy

Right now, it’s all about Ashland: I’m Reiterating my Buy rating for Ashland (NYSE: ASH), first recommended on May 4, 2009 at a price of $26.03. If you purchased then, you’re up about 40%. Not bad, for an economy that’s just starting to pull out of a recession.

Ashland makes specialty resins, polymers, and adhesives for sale in North America and Europe. It also owns the Valvoline oil-change brand and oil service chain, and the Zerex anti-freeze brand, among other business operations.

Continue reading As expected, Ashland is starting to deliver

As expected, Ashland is starting to deliver originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 28 Aug 2009 14:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Debt consolidation and debt settlement adverts are all over the media lately. This is quite predictable when millions upon millions of Americans are behind in their payments and risking foreclosure on their mortgages besides being maxed out on their credit cards. Understanding what each debt management system will do for you and which is the right one for you is vital if you are in serious debt and are struggling to make payments.

Debt Consolidation.

You have no doubt seen many adverts promising to consolidate your debts into one large loan that will charge you a lower interest rate and cheaper monthly payments. These debt consolidation loans do exist and can work for you if you choose the right loan. Of course they can also be the biggest financial mistake you make.

Understanding how debt consolidation loans work is the key to making the right choice.
Debt consolidation generally works as a secondary or even a primary mortgage loan. A debt consolidation company will buy off your other debts and  put them together into a mortgage-like loan. This makes your interest rate drop as the loan is secured by your home. The bad news is that the security for the loan is your home. If you don’t make payments your loan is at risk. However if your debts are on your credit cards or car loan and you do not make payments your debtors cannot force you to sell your home. However if your lender provides you with a debt consolidation secured by your home you could be forced to sell to pay the loan.
Another risk related to debt consolidation loans is that they can be expensive and incur in high setup fees which increase the principal on your debt and the interest you pay throughout the lifetime of the loan.

Debt Settlement.

Debt settlement works on a different premise. You settle directly with your lender and doesn’t involve a third party that buys your debt, reducing expenses significantly.
In order to settle your loan you must contact the debt settlement department of your bank and explain that although you would love to pay your loan you currently cannot afford to do so. They will ask for a load of information on your income and expenses and see what modifications they can make on your loan.

Modifications can include reducing the principal amount of your loan, increase the length of your loan and even reduce the interest rate.
The problem with debt settlement is that it destroys your credit rating as you are basically telling your lender you can’t pay your debts and that you need their help. That is not going to make you very popular with lenders.

A soft form of debt settlement is being encouraged by the government through the loan modification program.  It is well worth contacting the H.U.D (Housing and Urban Development department) to see if you can qualify for mortgage aid.

Which is the right debt management for you? Doing your own research is the key to find out. Neither of these options are without its disadvantages which is why planning and research are vital.

Related posts:

  1. So What Is A Debt Consolidation And Is It A Good Idea For You?
  2. Common pitfalls of debt consolidation you must avoid.
  3. Debt Relief DIY: 3 smart things you can do yourself

Related posts:

  1. So What Is A Debt Consolidation And Is It A Good Idea For You?
  2. Common pitfalls of debt consolidation you must avoid.
  3. Debt Relief DIY: 3 smart things you can do yourself

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: American Express (AXP), Stocks to Buy

I’m Reiterating my Buy rating for American Express (NYSE: AXP), first recommended on April 27, 2009 at a price of $27.28. If you purchased American Express’ shares then, you’re up a modest 20% or so.

The pessimists regarding AXP have been off-the-mark. Don’t misunderstand: we’re still in an era of constrained credit with not enough capital (at least not enough capital deployed) for commercial operations, but credit market conditions are improving.

Continue reading American Express thwarts the naysayers

American Express thwarts the naysayers originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 28 Aug 2009 15:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Newsletters, Agriculture, Stocks to Buy

Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (NASDAQ: GMCR) recently reported an outstanding second quarter,” notes growth stock expert Michael Cintolo in The Cabot Market Letter.

The advisor explains, “Initially after the earnings report, the stock fell following its report, supposedly because revenue growth was light. But we think focusing on that detail misses the big picture.

“First, revenue growth is still accelerating; the second quarter’s rose 61% from a year ago, compared to 60%, 56% and 45% growth the prior three quarters.

Continue reading Wake up to Green Mountain (GMCR)

Wake up to Green Mountain (GMCR) originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 28 Aug 2009 10:00:00 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.

Did You Enjoy The Post? Subscribe to Dr. Housing Bubble’s Blog to get updated housing commentary, analysis, and information.

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]


Loan Modifications has been the flavor of the month in the finance news sections for some time now and August was no exception. We started the month with the government’s report on mortgage services participating in the government’s loan modification program. The administration reported how unsatisfied it was with the progress and that mortgage providers had been inconsistent in their efforts to modify loans which is a polite way of saying they were doing a rubbish job.
The Treasury department also reported the number of loan modifications and trial modifications that were being carried out. The picture was not great but it is very likely that the real picture is far worse.

The Treasury department prepared its figures by comparing the number of trial modifications each bank or service provider had started with the number of loans eligible for the loan modification program. All is clear up to there. The glitch occurs when you realize that only borrowers that are 60 days or more behind in their payments are included as “eligible borrowers”. The real number of borrowers in desperate need of a loan modification is much larger.
Is this a small discrepancy with the real story, just a different way of describing the situation? Hardly.

The Making Home Affordable program included in its data homeowners that had already defaulted or will likely default “imminently” which includes those that have not missed a payment yet. This is very different when compared with what the Treasury department did and the discrepancy is by no means small. For instance in the first quarter of this year 8.8 percent of mortgages were 60 days or more delinquent but there was an additional 3.25 percent between 30 and 60 days according to the Mortgage Bankers Association National Delinquency Survey. If we counted those that were just on the edge of becoming delinquent the picture just gets worse and worse.

The Treasury Department reported that 9 percent of the eligible borrowers were being helped by the loan modification program. However the real figure is really between 5.9 percent and 7.8 percent if we use the Making Homes Affordable figures.
The change in accounting methods is caused by what the Treasury Department wanted to highlight; the number of desperate homeowners that are already  in trouble that are being helped. Up to now over 235,000 homeowners are involved in a three month trial modification and the goal is to reach 500,000 by November.

Related posts:

  1. Loan modification success reported by OCWEN, others not so confident
  2. Loan Modification: Wells and Fargo VP Vows To Improve Bad Service
  3. Loan Modification Hall of Shame, How Bad Is Your Bank

Related posts:

  1. Loan modification success reported by OCWEN, others not so confident
  2. Loan Modification: Wells and Fargo VP Vows To Improve Bad Service
  3. Loan Modification Hall of Shame, How Bad Is Your Bank

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Politics, Federal Reserve, Financial Crisis

What exactly is the Fed appealing? On August 24, Loretta Preska, Chief U.S. District judge, ruled that the Fed must disclose the identities of borrowers in 11 lending programs amounting to $2 trillion dollars.

In its motion, the Fed argued that “The immediate release of these documents will destroy the board’s claims of exemption and right of appellate review.”

The Fed’s statement went on to say that “the Fed’s ability to effectively manage the current, and any future, financial crisis would be impaired.” It said “significant harm” could befall the U.S. economy as well.

Continue reading Fed appeals Court’s decision to release details of $2 trillion dollar bailouts

Fed appeals Court’s decision to release details of $2 trillion dollar bailouts originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Thu, 27 Aug 2009 15:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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