Archive for November 24th, 2009

Filed under: Internet, Google (GOOG), Yahoo! (YHOO), Technology

Google (GOOG) just picked up another promising startup in its effort to gain some ground in the online visual advertising market. Teracent, which was formed three years ago, is becoming part of the search engine giant.

Yahoo! (YHOO) currently leads the market in display advertising sales, and Google has been trying push into the space. Last year, this led to its acquisition of online ad service DoubleClick, but that was a first step rather than a total solution to Google’s display ad ambitions.

Continue reading Teracent: Display ad biz joins the Google family

Teracent: Display ad biz joins the Google family originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 12:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Attorney General Jerry Brown has most likely received a response from the top 10 option ARM lenders in California given that November 23rd was the deadline to respond to his initial request for data.  Hopefully we’ll have a better sense of how deep the mess goes in the state but given the massive amount of […]

Attorney General Jerry Brown has most likely received a response from the top 10 option ARM lenders in California given that November 23rd was the deadline to respond to his initial request for data.  Hopefully we’ll have a better sense of how deep the mess goes in the state but given the massive amount of shadow inventory, I can tell you that the rabbit hole is much deeper than you may think.  Yet some would rather wallow in denial and somehow expect that an economy with no job growth is suddenly going to reinvigorate home prices up to the bubble heydays.  I understand the nostalgia but that doesn’t mean we’ll be seeing peak prices any time soon.  The state of California is looking at $20+ billion deficits annually until 2015.  We have some serious rebalancing to do.   Household balances sheets are riddled with debt and the allure of real estate is forever shattered for a generation.

Ultimately property values need to reflect local economies.  This might be hard for some to grasp since we really haven’t seen this for over a decade in California.  But bursting bubbles have a way of unraveling the yarn.  If California has an unemployment/underemployment rate of 23 percent, it is important to correct the employment situation before thinking about rising property values.  That is why California has seen tax revenues plummet because in the reality based economic system most of us live in, incomes are tight, stocks have taken a hit, and real estate has seen values collapse.  So the negative wealth effect is in full force just as people load up on Thanksgiving dinners and gear up for the Black Friday hamster consumer madness.

Even with the rise in the stock market, negative equity has exploded:

negative-equity

The number of underwater homeowners is mind boggling and a recent report now has 1 out of 4 borrowers underwater.  Here in California with toxic Alt-A and option ARMs, we have so many people underwater that we might need some scuba gear to get out of this housing abyss.  Yet we are in the eye of the hurricane here.  This is what we know:

-Alt-A and option ARMs are imploding but not making their way to inventory.  The current state is see no evil, hear no evil.

-$8,000 tax credit has spurred home buying

-FHA insured loans now finance about 4 out of 10 California home purchases

-The Fed has purchased over $1.2 trillion in mortgage backed securities pushing mortgage rates to historical lows

-Fall and winter are seasonally weaker selling seasons

-Commercial real estate defaults expected to explode in the next few years

With that said, what happens if one of these factors is removed or turns out to be worse than forecasted?  In fact, as we have discussed many times with FHA insured loans, defaults are so high that the government is now forced to confront reality:

“(SF Chronicle) Higher down payments. FHA’s current minimum cash down payment is 3.5 percent. On a $200,000 house, a buyer can bring just $7,000 to the table, aside from closing costs. A purchase of a $500,000 house in a high-cost area requires only $17,500 in cash.

Critics say 3.5 percent does not force purchasers to have enough “skin in the game” to discourage them from missing payments or risking foreclosure. Rep. Scott Garrett, R-N.J., introduced legislation last month requiring a minimum 5 percent down payment for all future FHA loans. Ed Pinto, who served as Fannie Mae’s chief credit officer in the 1980s and is now a mortgage industry consultant, says FHA needs to move to a 10 percent minimum.”

I agree with Mr. Pinto that we need to bump up the minimum down payment for FHA insured loans to 10 percent.  That is politically not likely in this crony banking and government environment.  But 5 percent is now on the table.  As the defaults rise and the FHA goes the way of Fannie Mae, people are going to need to start forcing actual change.  Otherwise the government is simply the new subprime lender.  So what that you have a strong FICO score?  Many of those no-doc folks had strong FICO scores and how did that turn out?

The Shadow Knows – Pasadena

Today we are going to spend some time looking at Pasadena.  I want to dig deep into this city because we can see many of the above trends in full force.  Today we salute Pasadena with our Real City of Genius Award.

Let us first look at the total listed MLS inventory:

519 MLS listings

Foreclosures 22

Short Sales 42

So this is an interesting perspective of the area.  519 properties listed with 22 foreclosures and 42 short sales.  12 percent of inventory is distressed.  Not bad right?  Well let us look at the overall picture:

In reality, there are 742 distressed properties in the city that break out as follows:

pasadena distress

Bank owned:                           101

Auction scheduled:                  349

Pre-foreclosures (NOD):           292

This is how the data breaks down:

pasadena inventory

Plus, how many other homeowners have stopped paying altogether and have no NOD filed?  That is another large part of the shadow inventory.  But you can see from this data that the actual MLS only has roughly 64 properties of the total distressed list of 742.  The 742 number that the public cannot see is 42 percent larger than the entire MLS data.  There are literally two markets running parallel to one another.  The façade world of everything is okay and smiles everywhere and the other world where properties are defaulting in mass and borrowers are simply not paying their mortgages.

The real action is going on in the pre-foreclosures.  Let us look at a specific example:

pasadena home 1

This home is listed as a 4 bedroom and 3 baths home.  The data has it at 2,763 square feet so it is a good sized home.  Let us look at the sales history:

Sale History:

03/23/2000:                        $245,000

Not a bad price for this sized home in Pasadena.  Yet the action is in the details:

pasadena note details 1

Another home equity withdrawal machine here.  The $245,000 mortgage in 2000 was modest.  Then in 2001 $345,000 in mortgages were secured by the property in what looks to be a major cash out deal.  In 2003, Wells Fargo graciously gave a $411,000 mortgage on this place.  Let the bubble continue.  In 2004 the property got another refinance up to $555,000.  Then in 2005, it was party time.  A $750,000 note and a $100,000 note making the value go up to $850,000.  Finally in December of 2006, a $925,000 loan was secured on the place almost getting to $1 million from $245,000 in 2000.  Sure seemed like a fun decade in this home.

But now this person owes $25,779 just to get current.  Even the optimistic Zestimate places the value of this home at:

zestimate home one

To be abundantly clear, someone is likely to lose a lot of money here.  But for the time being, they can claim this place is worth $925,000.  This is the kind of world California real estate is in.  This is a historical, once in a lifetime kind of bubble.  For example on this home let us assume it sells for the Zestimate.  You would naturally think that a $300,000 loss would be reflected somewhere and it will be.  Yet the Case-Shiller is going to see a sizable jump here.  After all, the last recorded sale was for $245,000 so a sale of $600,000+ is a giant leap.  The magnitude of this bubble throws so many metrics off that we have no historical parallel.  Yet anyone that claims things are going well simply is not looking at the more nuanced data and the building pipeline.

Today we salute you Pasadena with our Real City of Genius Award.

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Post from: Dr. Housing Bubble Blog

Real City of Genius: Today we Salute Pasadena. When losing $300,000 is Actually a Gain for Housing Values. Shadow Inventory Twice as big as Public Data.

Via [DrHousingBubble]


The Mortgage Crisis or Credit Crisis as many are more accurately describing it has left millions of Americans (and Earthlings worldwide for that matter) in or at the brink of foreclosure. Banks and Government have launched an ongoing set of increasingly aggressive programs to solve this terrible problem.

Not all the help is coming from the Government either. One association of banks which call themselves the Hope Now Alliance assures they have helped keep over 2 million troubled borrowers in their homes by changing the terms of their loans.

Similarly the Government is proud to say they have surpassed their short term goal of 500,000 trial loan modifications nearly a month before schedule. If you hear the sales spiel for these loan modifications it sounds like mortgage paradise; reduced interest rates to zero, whole chunks of the principal balance wiped out and it goes on and on. To be fair some borrowers have enjoyed these excellent deals . What is also true is that many loan modifications simply moved payments to the end of the loan which provided a kick the can down the road solution. Regulators report that half of these loan modifications are defaulting six months later.

The trouble with loan modifications is that it is not easy to qualify to them. The paperwork is enough to drive you crazy and the red tape is so slow you want to scream, especially when foreclosure proceedings continue despite your loan modification is being in process.

Why are loan modifications so slow?

Well there are many answers to this question. We are going to look at three basic answers to this question.

1)    Mortgages are not always owned by the bank or institution you bought them from. Banks often simply work as middle men, servicing mortgages for investors. They sell the product, collect payments and answer any questions. IndyMac for instance manages 650,000 loans but only owns 7% of them. The other 93% is owned by a variety of investors ranging from private individuals to pension funds.

This means that when banks don’t own a loan they must ask the investors that own them if they are willing to modify the loan. It is easy to imagine how much paperwork and time dealing with the borrower, getting their details, studying each specific case, then finding the real owner of the loan and asking them if they mind losing some money on their loan is going to take.

2)    Banks aren’t designed to modify loans but to sell them. Banks make money by selling loans and mortgages. Modifying them is, as we mentioned above, a slow and time consuming process that doesn’t make money. The government has started to fund the loan modification process which has helped to speed things up, but banks still have to redesign themselves to deal appropriately with the millions of borrowers in trouble.

3)    Foreclosures are often a better deal for the lenders. Loan modifications are a hard bullet to bite for lenders. You are asking them to accept a certain loss if they modify the loan by reducing interest rates or “forgiving” a chunk of the balance when they can also take their chances with a foreclosure which might actually make them a profit. In some cases loan modifications are profitable for both the lender and the borrower and in those cases paperwork does seem to go faster.

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modifications, lies, scams and misinformation
  2. Loan Modifications Are They Just A Big Scam
  3. Loan Modifications, 3 Nightmare Stories You Don’t Want To Copy

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modifications, lies, scams and misinformation
  2. Loan Modifications Are They Just A Big Scam
  3. Loan Modifications, 3 Nightmare Stories You Don’t Want To Copy

Source [blownmortgage]


Loan Modifications do not seem to be the solution Government hoped it to be. It is having some success, over 650,000 trial loan modifications, but the floodgates of foreclosure risk homes are not even close to being closed. Of the 650,000 trial loans only 1,711 borrowers got a permanent loan modification. Many experts predict that few of the trial loan modification will work long term and that most troubled borrowers will ultimately foreclose on their homes.

This bleak outlook has made Government and Federal Agencies look elsewhere to provide alternative options to loan modifications. One of these options, Deed for Lease, we mentioned last week and we are going to take a second look at it.

This option which has been kicked around in the nationwide housing crisis debate was finally taken on by Fannie Mae which has started to offer leases of up to 12 months when other avenues to keeping families in their homes, like loan modifications are unsuccessful.  Some like Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research see it as a great step forward in Government policy.

So will Dead for Lease, renting your own home be a viable option for struggling homeowners?

It is certainly an interesting idea. On one level it could be seen as a win-win option for pretty much everybody, at least in certain circumstances.

Win-win, because struggling homeowners get a chance to stay in their home when it has been settled that they can’t afford their mortgage but can afford the market rent of their home. It would also be good news for the neighborhoods struggling homeowners live in as it would avoid the drop in house prices foreclosed ridden neighborhoods are characterized by.

Even lenders may find this option appealing as an alternative to selling properties at cut rate prices. Lenders could turn landlords for as long as the market takes to turn around when they could sell the properties.

However few are predicting an avalanche of copy cat programs following Fannie Mae’s Deed for Lease program. Why? Two main reasons stand out.

1)      Legal liability. Once a bank turns landlord he acquires responsibilities towards his tenants, the previous homeowners. The tenants could demand work being carried out on their home if there are cases of mold, Chinese drywall or other hazards in the home.

2)      Banks are lenders not landlords. Most business like to stick to what they do best and not get into others types of business. As Chase spokesman Tom Kelly is reported to have said: “We’re not really equipped to be landlords”.  Lenders in the U.S are sitting on nearly half a million repossessed homes. The operation required to manage leases on such a volume of homes does not seem attractive to many lenders at this moment. Most prefer to dump the properties on the market even if it is a buyer’s market and prices are very low.

Fannie Mae has subcontracted landlord management duties to another country but it is doubtful other companies will follow suit.

3)      Leasing properties is often not as profitable as selling, especially when your business is not geared to managing a rental operation.

These reasons would indicate that Deed for Lease will not be a big deal in the mortgage market, at least for now. However there is no reason it won’t take off later on. There are many examples of housing policies starting small with federal housing agencies (like Fannie Mae) and then exploding to take nation and industry wide importance. A good example of this are loan modifications.

Many economists predict that loan modifications will not stop the avalanche of foreclosures caused by an ever increasing rate of unemployment and a nationwide drop in home prices. This might provide a chance for more attention to the idea of renting homes back to previous owners if the market is so saturated selling is no longer a viable option.

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modification Alternatives: Is Renting Your Home A Viable Option
  2. Loan Modification Alternatives: Short Sale Your Home
  3. $75 Billion Making Home Affordable Loan Modification Program Gets To Work

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modification Alternatives: Is Renting Your Home A Viable Option
  2. Loan Modification Alternatives: Short Sale Your Home
  3. $75 Billion Making Home Affordable Loan Modification Program Gets To Work

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Wal-Mart (WMT), Amazon.com (AMZN), Market matters, Citigroup Inc. (C), Regions Financial (RF), Bank of America (BAC), Wells Fargo (WFC), Cramer on BloggingStocks, Financial Crisis

TheStreet.com’s Jim Cramer says the sooner banks repay TARP, the more likely they will power higher in 2010.

The Federal Reserve wants higher stock prices. That’s all I can think of when I see that it wants repayment plans into place for the big banks such as Bank of America (BAC) (Cramer’s Take), PNC (PNC) (Cramer’s Take), Citigroup (C) (Cramer’s Take), Fifth Third (FITB) (Cramer’s Take), Wells Fargo (WFC) (Cramer’s Take), Regions Financial (RF) (Cramer’s Take), SunTrust (STI) (Cramer’s Take) and KeyCorp (KEY) (Cramer’s Take), all names that haven’t repaid the Troubled Asset Relief Program yet.

Why would these plans bring about higher prices?

Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: The Fed’s push for TARP payback

Cramer on BloggingStocks: The Fed’s push for TARP payback originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 09:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Internet, Apple Inc (AAPL), Research in Motion (RIMM), Media World, Initial public offerings, Technology

Twitter is on the prowl. Though it made its last acquisition more than a year ago, company founder Biz Stone said on Tuesday that it’s looking to add to the stable. There aren’t any specific targets yet — at least none revealed — and Twitter is keeping its options open. The likely pool of potential acquisitions consists of third-party Twitter application developers, which is largely responsible for the micro-blogging service’s growth in popularity.

Stone, one of Twitter’s founders, said at a Tel Aviv news conference, “As our attention is grabbed by some of these developers, we will take a hard look at them.” This refers to companies that develop applications for Apple’s (AAPL) iPhone and Research in Motion’s (RIMM) Blackberry. It also refers to developers for the Web and desktop, such as HootSuite and TweetDeck.

Continue reading Twitter to make acquisitions, generate revenue in 2010

Twitter to make acquisitions, generate revenue in 2010 originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 10:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Competitive strategy, Dell (DELL)

Dell, Inc. (DELL) has been beaten up verbally recently, and its stock price has plummeted as well. The company’s latest quarter was nothing to write home about, and there is talk that Dell’s edge has long since been dulled and the company is a lumbering giant unable to do anything more than sell and service commodity products. The recent Perot Systems acquisition is more a defensive move than an offensive one, for example. So, is Dell floundering? In many ways, definitely yes.

Continue reading Dell being left behind as PC market re-energizes itself?

Dell being left behind as PC market re-energizes itself? originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Mon, 23 Nov 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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