Archive for October 16th, 2009

Filed under: Earnings reports, Products and services, Industry, Consumer experience, Harley-Davidson (HOG)

Investors may be bemoaning Harley-Davidson Inc.’s (NYSE: HOG) less-than-rocking earnings report this week, but there are reasons to still cheer the venerable motorcycle maker, whose stock is up 65 percent this year despite lower sales and tumbling profits. Shares rose more than 1 percent in Friday afternoon trading to more than $28 each.

On Thursday, Harley-Davidson said it earned $26.5 million, or 11 cents a share, in the third quarter, down from $166.5 million, or 71 cents a share, a year ago. Third-quarter sales dropped 21 percent to $1.12 billion, but a 21.3 percent drop in worldwide retail deliveries was far better than in the previous quarter, when sales slipped 30 percent worldwide and 35 percent in the U.S.

Continue reading Harley-Davidson rumbles on amid painful restructuring

Harley-Davidson rumbles on amid painful restructuring originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 16 Oct 2009 16:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bless our real estate addicted society.  You would think that a housing crash unlike anything seen since the Great Depression would teach us some lessons.  It has been two years since the recession started and a decade long housing bubble.  The first thing you would probably remove from the market is the toxic mortgage sector.  […]

Bless our real estate addicted society.  You would think that a housing crash unlike anything seen since the Great Depression would teach us some lessons.  It has been two years since the recession started and a decade long housing bubble.  The first thing you would probably remove from the market is the toxic mortgage sector.  Somehow in the mind of the politicos and Wall Street, the idea of allowing low down payment mortgages is still part of the turbo capitalist psyche.  Recent data from FHA loans is abysmal.  In fact, we are seeing subprime like trends.  Recent data is suggesting that it is only a matter of time before the FHA goes to the American people for a bailout.

What is troubling is that instead of stopping the problem, lenders are ramping up their FHA backed loans since banks are hoarding money like packrats.  On Thursday Edward Pinto, a financial services consultant and also a former chief credit officer of Fannie Mae (1987 – 1989) gave testimony to the U.S. House of Representative Housing and Community Opportunity Subcommittee.  So Mr. Pinto must know something about credit risk.  The first chart presented is absolutely astounding:

fha loans

From 1951 to about 1990, FHA annual foreclosure starts stayed below 2 percent.  The range was tight.  However, from 1990 to our current bust the FHA annual foreclosure rate has doubled and shows no signs of stopping.  You would think that with Alt-A loans and option ARMs we realized how bad it was to give people loans with little or no money down or having Warren Buffet as a co-signer when you work at Wal-Mart.  Precaution unfortunately is not being taken.  In fact, the government is basically stepping in to make up for the lack of toxic mortgage lenders instead of creating a more stable mortgage system.

Both the FHA and Veterans Administration now make up over 90% of all high loan to value mortgages.  The vast majority of these loans have LTV over 96% which is smart if you enjoy driving off economic cliffs.  Keep in mind that the government is now insuring loans even though the housing market has not stabilized.  In the report issued on Thursday another risk highlighted was the ability for people to use the $8,000 tax credit and apply that to the downpayment requirement.  So you have one government program screwing with another.  Think of someone buying a $200,000 home.  For a FHA loan, you would only need roughly 5 percent for a downpayment, or $10,000.  Use the tax credit and you are buying a home for one month of rent!  Can you say zero down?

FHA is basically eating up the slack from imploded toxic mortgage lenders.  FHA insured loans are now up four times in volume from their 2006 pace.  They will constitute some 10% of all outstanding loans by the end of the year.  And in some areas, these new low money down loans are making up a big chunk of new sales:

“(DQ News) At the same time, a common form of financing used by first-time home buyers in more affordable neighborhoods remains near record levels. Government-insured, FHA mortgages made up 37.4 percent of all purchase loans in August, up from 37.0 percent in July and 27.1 percent in August last year.”

Did you get that?  In some regions nearly 4 out of 10 home purchases came from these little money down loans.  This isn’t some low priced region.  This is high priced Southern California.  And this brings us to another risk brought by these loans.  The loan cap is now up to $729,750. Now why do you need such a high cap when the median home price across the U.S. is less than $200,000?  Of course, this is basically allowing major bubble HGTV addicted areas like California and Florida to use up these loans to create basically another housing bubble.  As we realize, even if you have a high income, if you don’t have skin in the game you will walk.  Those Alt-A and option ARM borrowers in California are strategically defaulting even before the 2010 recast wave hits next year.  It is naïve to think people won’t walk away from these loans either.  The only difference now is you have to document your income.  Is that the only lesson we have learned!?  Talk about lack of analysis.

The FHA also has a long history of fraud which is perfect since most defunct toxic mortgage factories were full of fraud as well.  These are basically toxic mortgage-lites and now we can rest assured that since they are looking at two years of income, all is well in Candyland.  And loans are getting crappier and crappier:

fha loan performance

If things are getting better in the housing market why are these loans imploding?  This isn’t linked to option ARMs but is linked to poor lending philosophy.  There was also recent legislation requiring lenders to increase net worth requirements on September 18, 2009.  Yet this is a joke since four lenders make up 85 percent of all FHA loans:

(1)  Wells Fargo

(2)  Bank of America

(3)  Chase Home Finance

(4)  CitiMortgage

The too big to fail otherwise known as the Larry, Moe and Curly of lending are now government fronts pumping out near zero down mortgages.  Make no mistake that FHA is now growing in this environment because the government and Wall Street are determined to recreate the ecology that caused this housing bubble in the first place.  Yet it won’t work and it is putting the country at risk.  If the dollar tanking isn’t warning enough, we are going to get a wakeup call next year with commercial real estate and the Alt-A and option ARM tsunami.

Another shocking yet not surprising highlight in the report is the ever diminishing fund for losses with the FHA:

reserve funds

Just like the FDIC DIF going to zero a few days ago, we can expect this fund to do the same thing.  But guess what?  We are on the hook for these loans since they are government backed!  Instead of heeding the warning from that first chart above, FHA insured loans are being pumped out in mass because crony banks don’t mind gambling with your money while keeping reserves hiked up for the losses they know are coming down the pipeline.  What did TARP do?  It allowed toxic banks to survive courtesy of taxpayer charity.  As I predicted when TARP was put in place over a year ago, the American people have gotten nothing in return.

And while people are pumping their fist in the air for victory because of loan modifications, does anyone even bother to look at the details of what constitutes a loan mod?  Loan modifications are glamorous versions of rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanic and a waste of money.  Let us look at some details:

loan mod stats

If you want to sum up the above it is extend and pretend.  First, overdue interest is capitalized into the actual mortgage increasing LTV thus increasing risk.  This is negative amortization-lite by the way and one key problem with option ARMs.  Another smart move is basically extending the term on the loan up to 40 years!  Good times in the government mortgage sausage factory.  They took the ideas of the sewage industry, otherwise known as subprime and Alt-A mortgage brokers and made them government policy.  If you need any more support how pathetic the success rate is, just look at the 59.1% re-default rate.

Want a simple solution?  Instead of giving these loan servicers $1,000 per modification, how about you give $1,000 to the owner so they can use the money for a rental deposit?  Isn’t that more efficient in the long run anyway?  They clearly cannot afford to live in their home and that is okay!  Owning a home isn’t a right by the way.  Why not give out a rental tax break?  Rental vacancies are now sky high and this will add pressure to commercial real estate.  Then again, we are asking for some logic here from Wall Street and our government and they have proven to us that government, Wall Street, and housing simply do not mix like drinking and driving.

We get some excellent suggestions regarding FHA insured loans in the testimony:

fha conclusions

Yes, yes, yes, and yes!  10 percent should be an absolute minimum and no, you can’t use any tax breaks for the downpayment.  This is money that you save.  Not a damn nationwide subsidy.  And one point that is absolutely obvious is how in the world is a $729,000+ loan a low to moderate home price?  This is nuts!  Lower the cap to national median prices.  The Federal government subsidizes this so it only makes sense.  You want a $400,000 loan?  Then let Bank of America hold the loan on their book with no government backing.  We can rest assured they’ll be doing better due diligence.  Keep on pumping out FHA insured loans and what do these banks care?  These are the same toxic banks that were responsible for the housing bubble so we can rest assured we are in good hands.

I love in the attachments Mr. Pinto includes an article showing the problems going on with the FHA.  But this chart just cracks me up:

gambling

So it is true!  The perfect correlation is increased disposable income in gambling tying in with higher gambling with toxic mortgages.  What is so maddening about these reports is that it was showing clear cases of where the risk was in the system.  Take a look at this report by Fannie Mae in 2006:

loans in foreclosures

And of course this chart is only worse today.  So it isn’t that no one saw this entire mess coming.  What really occurred is no one in a position of power had the fortitude to act.  That is the issue.  The system was flooded with plutocrats listening to their lobbying masters and these Cassandra’s were merely pushed down the funnel of oblivion.  Until we can reform the governing system, we can expect more crap to fly.  That is why the tax credit is being championed by the real estate industry shills even though the cost to taxpayers is counterproductive and such an utter waste of money.  Yet these shills kick money down to our beloved Congress.  And that is why even though we have hard data showing the train that is coming down the rails with FHA instead of applying the brakes, the government is greasing the track!  Then you have the real estate industry cronies jumping up and down at the prospect of the credit being removed.  Most credible analysts and economists do not stand behind the tax credit.  It is a waste of money.

You can download the full report with attachments here.  It is worth a read.  Too bad the plutocrats will continue to sleep with their lobbyist and FHA is merely another problem for another day.  FHA is the loan of choice for fellow comrades.

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FHA Loans the Choice of Housing Comrades. How Government Backed Loans are creating Another Problem for the Housing Market.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

Filed under: Before the bell, International markets, Earnings reports, Google (GOOG), General Electric (GE), Market matters, International Business Machines (IBM), Bank of America (BAC), Economic data

U.S. stock futures were mixed and barely moved Friday morning after Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) and International Business Machines (NYSE: IBM) beat analyst estimates late Thursday and as results came in this morning from General Electric (NYSE: GE) and Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), with the first also surpassing Wall Street expectations. [Update 8:45 a.m.: Futures turned negative after the large Dow companies didn’t perform quite as well.]

The Dow Jones Industrial Average managed to close above the 10,000 mark Thursday, for the second day in a row, despite earlier weakness following some financial sector results. But a jump in oil prices helped oil stocks move higher and the Dow maintain that important psychological mark.

Continue reading Before the bell: Stock futures lower after GE beats, BofA reports loss

Before the bell: Stock futures lower after GE beats, BofA reports loss originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 16 Oct 2009 07:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: ETF Investing, Stocks to Buy, Green Stocks

Investors hoping to ride the climate change bandwagon have had a roller coaster ride over the past two years. Greentech stocks soared with the oil spike in 2007 and 2008, then crashed with stock market and commodity price declines in 2009. Since then, some of the most obvious stock plays have strongly rebounded. Many solar stocks have posted high double-digit gains since rebounding off year-to-date lows in March 2009.

The leading solar panel manufacturer, FirstSolar (NASDAQ: FSLR) has appreciated by 45% from lows of near $100 to a closing price of $154 on October 14. “I wouldn’t be stepping into buying these stocks right now,” says Pacific Crest senior analyst Mark Bachman, who covers solar stocks. Still, he rates FirstSolar as a market perform and considers it the best solar stock at present on his coverage list.

Continue reading With solar overheated, here are two indirect ways to play climate change

With solar overheated, here are two indirect ways to play climate change originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Thu, 15 Oct 2009 09:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Via [bloggingstocks]


While everybody is deciding if Obama deserves the Peace Nobel prize on effort and good intent or not, another achievement is not receiving half as much attention.  This month (October 09) more than 500,000 troubled home loans have joined a trial modification program, the Obama administration announced this Thursday.

Trial loan modifications last around 3 months and are a requisite to qualify for a final loan modification. If the homeowners pay all their mortgage payments on time they qualify for incentive bonuses and the loan modification.

The short term goal was to reach 500,000 by November. The loan modifications must meet certain requirements to qualify for the program. For instance the monthly payments must be reduced to at least 31 percent of the homeowner’s monthly pre-tax income.

Reports show that 16 percent of troubled homeowners, defined as at least 2 months delinquent have qualified for a loan modification.
Even though these figures are promising and Federal officials claim they are on track to meet the long term goal of helping 3 to 4 million borrowers in 3 years it is still early days to claim victory on the credit crisis.

Many experts accuse the program of being a good medicine for the wrong illness. They claim the problem with the American economy is a credit crisis not a mortgage crisis.

The fact the target of loan modifications was reached doesn’t mean it is easy to get one. Among the local success of the loan modification trial program performance among banks varies widely. The government is continuing to name and shame banks that are not fulfilling the expectations set against them. The percentages of eligible loans that are offered a trial modification in the major banks is as follows:

Citigroup: 33 percent
JPMorgan Chase: 27 percent
Wells Fargo : 20 percent
Bank of America: 11 percent.

JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo have increased their percentage heavily while Bank of America remains the worst major bank at providing loan modifications.
The main problem with the program that is causing this variety of success rates among banks is that the loan modification program that encourages banks to make the loan modifications happen has no teeth. If the bank decides not to modify loans they should there is nothing specific the government can do. This of course does not promote banks going overboard when trying to meet their loan modifying targets.

Good news for the economy and homeowners is that U.S Treasury Secretary Timothy Geitner is reported as saying that loan modifications are now running at a faster pace than foreclosure sales. This could be one of the first signs that the worst news in the mortgage industry is already behind us and we can start hoping for better things in the mortgage industry. It is still to early to know but you can always hope.

Loan Modifications: The Nobel Prize Not Alone Among Obama’s Early Achievements.
While everybody is deciding if Obama deserves the Peace Nobel prize on effort and good intent or not, another achievement is not receiving half as much attention.  This month (October 09) more than 500,000 troubled home loans have joined a trial modification program, the Obama administration announced this Thursday.
Trial loan modifications last around 3 months and are a requisite to qualify for a final loan modification. If the homeowners pay all their mortgage payments on time they qualify for incentive bonuses and the loan modification.
The short term goal was to reach 500,000 by November. The loan modifications must meet certain requirements to qualify for the program. For instance the monthly payments must be reduced to at least 31 percent of the homeowner’s monthly pre-tax income.
Reports show that 16 percent of troubled homeowners, defined as at least 2 months delinquent have qualified for a loan modification.
Even though these figures are promising and Federal officials claim they are on track to meet the long term goal of helping 3 to 4 million borrowers in 3 years it is still early days to claim victory on the credit crisis.
Many experts accuse the program of being a good medicine for the wrong illness. They claim the problem with the American economy is a credit crisis not a mortgage crisis.
The fact the target of loan modifications was reached doesn’t mean it is easy to get one. Among the local success of the loan modification trial program performance among banks varies widely. The government is continuing to name and shame banks that are not fulfilling the expectations set against them. The percentages of eligible loans that are offered a trial modification in the major banks is as follows:
Citigroup: 33 percent
JPMorgan Chase: 27 percent
Wells Fargo : 20 percent
Bank of America: 11 percent.
JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo have increased their percentage heavily while Bank of America remains the worst major bank at providing loan modifications.
The main problem with the program that is causing this variety of success rates among banks is that the loan modification program that encourages banks to make the loan modifications happen has no teeth. If the bank decides not to modify loans they should there is nothing specific the government can do. This of course does not promote banks going overboard when trying to meet their loan modifying targets.
Good news for the economy and homeowners is that U.S Treasury Secretary Timothy Geitner is reported as saying that loan modifications are now running at a faster pace than foreclosure sales. This could be one of the first signs that the worst news in the mortgage industry is already behind us.

Related posts:

  1. The Obama Loan Modification Aid Program, What Are The Benefits?
  2. Loan Modifications No Match For Rising US Foreclosures.
  3. Loan Modifications No Match For Rising US Foreclosures.

Related posts:

  1. The Obama Loan Modification Aid Program, What Are The Benefits?
  2. Loan Modifications No Match For Rising US Foreclosures.
  3. Loan Modifications No Match For Rising US Foreclosures.

Source [blownmortgage]


Providing loan modifications to those that need them and are eligible according to the current criteria is the goal of the cash happy loan modification aid program.

The goal is to keep out scammers and those who wish to take advantage of the system while not letting the “deserving” fall through the cracks. This is an ambitious goal. As we have discussed in previous blogs making good rules that keep out the cheats and welcomes the eligible is very hard.

Here is the current ten point criteria for loan modifications:

1.)    Loans must be conforming conventional loans or conforming jumbo mortgage loans and they must have been contracted before January 1, 2008. What is a “conforming” loan is changing all the time.

2.)    You must be three payments past due. This requirement was happily dropped. You don’t need to be behind in your payments although you must be able to prove you can’t pay your mortgage payments but could afford those of a modified loan.

3.)    The loan is secured by a one-unit property and must be the borrower’s primary residence.

4.)    The current mark to market LTV must be of 80 per cent or more.

5.)    Property must not be abandoned, vacant, condemned or in serious disrepair as well as being the borrowers primary residence.

6.)    The goal of the loan modification is to reduce monthly payments to 33% of the homeowners monthly income. In order for this to occur, servicers may:

7.)    Capitalize accrued interest, escrow advances and costs as far as state law allows.

8.)    Extend the term of the mortgage (tenure) by up to 480 months (40 years).

9.)    Reduce the mortgage loan interest rate in increments of .125% to a fixed rate of no less than 3%. If this causes the rate to be below market rate it will step up in annual increments  to a market rate after 5 years have passed.

10.)    As a last resort eligible borrowers will be provided principal forbearance which will result in balloon payment. This means payments will be kept low while the big money is paid when the house is sold or the loan matures.

Some of the points of this criterion are under their third or even fourth revision so checking for accuracy is wise. The key criteria is to be able to afford the reduced monthly payments. If you can’t afford a reasonable loan modification there is little hope. This does not mean unemployed borrowers are automatically barred from loan modifications but they must provide some proof of income or prove they are likely to find employment soon.

The methods the government suggests to reduce monthly payments are rather bold which explains why many banks are doing their best to drag their feet as in many cases it actually costs them money to provide the loan modification.

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modifications Only Hope For American Dream
  2. Loan Modifications, The Truth Behind The Spin
  3. Loan Modifications, lies, scams and misinformation

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modifications Only Hope For American Dream
  2. Loan Modifications, The Truth Behind The Spin
  3. Loan Modifications, lies, scams and misinformation

Source [blownmortgage]

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