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In recent months we have seen many articles talking about the lack of predictability in big bubbles like the current credit crisis.  Some of these authors argue that bubbles are impossible to predict and therefore preparation is futile.  This observation is false simply because history is littered by people that have predicted events including the […]

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In recent months we have seen many articles talking about the lack of predictability in big bubbles like the current credit crisis.  Some of these authors argue that bubbles are impossible to predict and therefore preparation is futile.  This observation is false simply because history is littered by people that have predicted events including the Great Depression.  And it is nonsense on the surface because if you see your friend having 20 shots of tequila it is very likely that it will not end pretty even though it is fun in the moment.  What makes bubbles seem impossible to predict during the mania is this collective groupthink where the herd dominates most of the conversation drowning out opposing views.  We’ve highlighted many homes during the years here in California and the obvious explanation was a bubble was here and it would burst at a certain point.  Yet there is little reward for being the messenger of bad news and this was the tragedy of any modern day Cassandra.

I’ve noticed a few people in other articles and blogs talk about how great of a deal they got on a California home.  30, 40, or even 50 percent off the peak price.  Yet this discount in itself is meaningless unless we put it into context of the local economy, incomes, and inflation-adjusted home prices for that area.  Yet even today, we see the same psychological trappings of those that bought in 2006 and 2007.  “Well it has to go up because it went up in 2002, 2003, etc” and this was the basis of prices heading higher.  Today, it is more like “I got a home for 30, 40, or even 50 percent off therefore it is a good deal.”  But price alone does not tell you everything.  If a low price was the measure of value, then Detroit would be the ultimate value play but there is a reason homes that once sold for $100,000 which seemed cheap a decade ago are now going for $1,000 or even $500.

Now why bring this up?  We are seeing unique trends in the housing market.  For example, there has been a large amount of sale activity in the Inland Empire:


Source:  DataQuick

The amount of sales in distressed markets is astounding.  From data showing financing on these purchases, we see that many investors are rushing out to buy homes.  But are prices making sense even in these areas where prices are down 50 or even 60 percent?  It is hard to tell because these local economics are feeling the brunt of the recession.  For example the above chart shows some areas in Riverside County part of the Inland Empire.  The sales volume above is intense.  For example, in the Temecula zip code above 38 home sold in December of 2007.  Today that volume is three times that.  The Hemet zip code above is running at double the pace.  So the volume is there.  But take a look at the unemployment rate in the Inland Empire:

Source: BLS

There is a reason for the extraordinarily cheap housing prices when headline unemployment is 14 percent (meaning the underemployment rate is upwards of 25 percent).  As an investor it is hard not to be tempted by low prices.  But going out there to view the market, you see in some cases, home after home either boarded up or completely uncared for.  Many of these communities are dealing with a large surge of Section 8 renters.  Just look at how many rentals are available in these areas and you can see that many investors are getting in over their heads.  They are only focusing on one side of the equation in price.  They are failing to examine the local economy or trends in the area.

MLS

For the first time in three years of tracking the MLS data have I seen a significant jump in inventory for Southern California.  The six counties in Southern California currently have 69,000 homes listed on the MLS.  This is up from the low reached in October of 2009 with 64,000 properties listed.  Part of this has to do with a large number of short sale properties hitting the list but also, the expiration of HAMP offers for many who simply do not qualify.  The housing market has gone from a manic casino to a slow payout slot machine.  But only looking at the MLS data is misleading as we already know.  We recently found out the massive gimmick Lehman Brothers was using to hide toxic assets.  Well the MLS does not tell the entire story.

If we look at distress inventory, we find out that it is true that many Southern California communities have a large amount of distress properties:

Source:  Foreclosure Radar

This is being reflected in the median sale price.  The median sale price in Southern California has gone up since it hit a low in January of 2009 of $250,000 for almost a year.  However, last month it dipped by $17,500.  Part of it has to do with the fact that California has a 12.5 percent unemployment rate.  A lot of the housing volume has come from investors.  Last month 28.9 percent of all Southern California home purchases were all cash.  So either people are looking to flip again or purchase to create rentals.  But the rental market is already saturated:

The California vacancy rate is the highest on record.  So if these investors plan on turning these units into rentals, by supply and demand prices will be pushed lower so hopefully they are factoring this in.  Some are taking solace that there will be no tsunami but in that belief, they assume that there will be no further price corrections.  This is one large fallacy going around today.  Tsunami, trickle, or any other weather comparison prices will correct in many areas simply because they do not reflect the current market.  Did we also mention the massive California budget deficit?

Estimated Balance on Distress Properties

One way to get a sense of how much correcting we have, I dug deeper into the distress data.  Take for example the top 1,000 properties in Los Angeles County that are scheduled for auction or bank owned:

These homes haven’t hit the market.  A handful are on the MLS but not many.  If these homes sell today for the estimated value (unlikely since it is a bit high) we would see an average loss of $195,175.  Now this is only a sample of the 63,000 distress properties in Los Angeles County.  Banks clearly have this data so they rather take on people that have stopped paying their mortgage then realize that $195,175 loss.  But this has a timeframe attached to it.  Just look at a couple of the mortgage balances.  $470,000 would carry a $3,000 to $4,000 total housing payment depending on the interest rate.  The loss on that property is roughly $210,000.  So they can hold off for 4 years ($4,000 x 48 months) but this won’t happen.  The most I’ve seen has been 18 months from when the NOD was filed.  Yet the loss at a certain point will be realized.  And make no mistake, the reason banks are not lending is because of this.  Their internal cash flow is bleeding.  They are simply hoping for a bubble resurgence which obviously is not going to happen.  Why?

California Big Salaries Down

What people don’t want to talk about deals with the reality that many of the high paying jobs were basically cogs of the bubble machine.  Many mortgage brokers, agents, and bankers were getting lucrative income for being sellers of this financial mess, the biggest since the Great Depression:

“(May 2007) Brokers can earn higher commissions – up to 3 percent instead of the typical 1 percent – by having customers buy loans with interest rates that are higher than market rates, with prepayment penalties charged if the loan is paid off before a certain date, and with little or no verification of the borrower’s income, known as “stated income” loans. That’s the difference between a $12,000 and a $4,000 commission on a $400,000 loan.

Leonard said he believes such practices are common, partially because there is no state law requiring the broker to disclose that the borrower is eligible for a lower rate.

Many loans offering the highest commissions have been subprime loans, higher interest rate loans that often are sold to those who have low credit ratings or present other risk factors, such as undocumented earnings. Mortgage industry experts say the majority of defaults in the last two years are tied to these loans.”

With option ARMs outlawed and other toxic junk finding no market in Wall Street, the only game in town is government backed loans that certainly do not carry a $12,000 commission.  So what we have is this:

And many of these people were buying in prime areas like the Westside with inflated bubble salaries that are now gone.  So the pool of qualified buyers is down for mid to upper tier markets.  Going back to the Cassandra effect, the state was satisfied as well because they were collecting large amounts of taxes from these people.  They were getting good money from payroll taxes but also, solid revenues from properties that were now assessed at absurd prices.  There was no incentive for the state to stop the party.  California was an economy that was built by the housing bubble both in employment and housing values.  It is now suffering on both ends of the spectrum.  That is why our unemployment rate is still at the peak while nationwide the unemployment rate seems to have leveled off.  It is also the case why our state government is in an absolute mess.  They counted on the bubble revenues:

So what this means is get ready for higher taxes or more cuts.  Unless we decide to recreate the housing infrastructure to start another bubble but Wall Street is already done with the housing market and is on to better bubbles to chase with taxpayer money.  In other words, California is going to have a stagnant housing market for years to come.

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Filed under: Forecasts, Industry

After weeks of speculation, the financial damage from the Chile earthquake and Windstorm Xynthia in Europe is starting to emerge. According to a recent report by Moody’s, 16 global reinsurance companies have reported their net insured losses (before taxes) from the catastrophe event, and the damage has already reached $3.5 billion, increasing an already high tally. The firm expects these events to have a noticeable impact on first quarter results for the industry.

According to the report, the first quarter of 2010’s results “will have many moving pieces, including the possibility of favorable loss reserve development.” It continues, though, that “we would expect a number of reinsurers to post both operating and net losses for the quarter.”

Continue reading Q1 Cats Likely to Have Reinsurance Earnings Impact

Q1 Cats Likely to Have Reinsurance Earnings Impact originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Sat, 20 Mar 2010 14:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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For borrowers, Federal Housing Administration changes are on the horizon. Some of the new policies are effective next month, and are all part of a plan to bolster FHA’s reserves.

Last year, FHA insured one-third of all approved mortgages. The capital-reserve ratio is no longer at the Congress-mandated 2 percent threshold. FHA Commissioner David Stevens even voiced his intention to hire a chief risk officer, a position the administration has never had since its 1934 inception.

“To be clear, the fund’s reserves are sufficient to cover our future losses, so the FHA will not require taxpayer assistance or new Congressional action,” Stevens said in a September press release.

In efforts to avoid a bailout, the FHA will make a series of policy changes:

• The up-front mortgage insurance premium (MIP) will increase to 2.25 percent from 1.75 percent. This change is effective starting April 5.
• To qualify for the FHA’s 3.5 percent down payment program, borrowers must have a credit score of at least 580. Those with a sub-580 score have to put down at least 10 percent.
• Seller concessions will be reduced to 3 percent from 6 percent, meaning buyers will not be able to inflate a home’s appraised value in efforts to pay off their closing costs.
• The FHA will implement an array of enforcements on FHA lenders, such as publicly reporting lender rankings and seeking legislative action that would make mortgagees for loans they give and underwrite.

“When combined with the risk management measures announced in September of last year, these changes are among the most significant steps to address risk in the agency’s history,” Stevens said in a January press release.

In addition to upping the MIP, the FHA is requesting legislative action to increase the maximum annual MIP. Should such legislation pass, the FHA plans to shift some of the up-front MIP to annual MIP, allowing borrowers to pay off the increase in monthly payments.

With less than a month before the MIP jump is effective, the other policy changes have no definite start date, but the FHA plans to implement all changes by this summer.

Related posts:

  1. Cutting LTVs is coming to a market near you!
  2. Commodities Reprieve Coming to an End
  3. Housing starts fall to 17-year low

Related posts:

  1. Cutting LTVs is coming to a market near you!
  2. Commodities Reprieve Coming to an End
  3. Housing starts fall to 17-year low

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Press Releases, Wal-Mart (WMT), Marketing and Advertising, DreamWorks Animation (DWA)

DreamWorks Animation (DWA) has an animated film coming to the the multiplexes next week. It’s called How to Train Your Dragon. I have no idea what it’s about (aside from the fact that it obviously involves training dragons). But I do know that a marketing transaction with Walmart (WMT) is making headlines.

According to a press release, Walmart and DreamWorks Animation apparently have come up with a very tightly coordinated plan to promote the project. There will be special sections dedicated to Dragon inside the stores. More than 100 licensed items will be lining the shelves. And some sort of event featuring a Viking vessel in Times Square will see what it can do to get potential ticket buyers interested in the flick.

Continue reading DreamWorks Animation Has High Hopes for ‘Dragon’

DreamWorks Animation Has High Hopes for ‘Dragon’ originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Sat, 20 Mar 2010 15:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Management, Law, Politics, Federal Reserve, Financial Crisis

In a long standing court battle between the media and the Fed, a decision to release bail out documents was handed down by the US Court of Appeals.

Last year, two reporters from Bloomberg News filed for disclosure of the documents under the Freedom of Information Act. Later a similar suit was filed by Fox News. The Fed countered that such information would cause “competitive and reputational harm” perhaps triggering bank runs and implode the central bank’s ability to effectively manage the current and any future financial crisis.

Continue reading Federal Reserve Ordered to Release Bail Out Documents

Federal Reserve Ordered to Release Bail Out Documents originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 19 Mar 2010 18:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Despite the Government’s best efforts and greatest intentions the wave of foreclosures continues to increase. The borrowers that are now defaulting on their mortgages and not qualifying for loan modifications are no longer people with subprime loans and bad credit rating. The fastest growing demographic in foreclosures are prime borrowers with prime loans that have lost their jobs and cannot afford any kind of deal on their mortgage.

This is a tragedy for the millions of families that face losing their homes. However there is a flip side to the crisis in the housing market. The flip side is that the foreclosure market is doing great. More and more buyers with cash in their pockets are looking for bargains among the millions of homes that are going through a foreclosure.

Many have the idea that the only homes that are on the foreclosure market are located in crime-ridden areas and are run down shacks. This is simply not true, during economic crisis like the one we are now going through all kinds of homes can be found, from beachfront luxury homes to shacks in the ghetto.

There is another myth a serious buyer must forget about as soon as possible. You are not going to find a great property selling at pennies on the dollar. Sometimes you can find amazing deals but this is probably because there are other circumstances that reduce the value of the home besides being on the foreclosure market.

However, you can get some great deals and discounts. A typical discount is probably around 5% less than the market value, although you can sometimes pay up to 30% or 40% less.

If you are savvy enough, this could only be the beginning of your savings. If you buy the property from the lender you could ask/demand for some of the buying costs to be waivered. If you ask nicely you might even get a discount on the interest rate or a break on the down payment.

Buying a home, whether on the foreclosure market or not, is a huge investment for most of us. It is therefore worth us spending some time doing our research and due diligence before we spend tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The foreclosure ball begins to roll when a borrowers falls behind on mortgage payments. A homeowner that loves his home will try his best to keep his home, making some payments, looking for a loan modification, or any other measure he can. However, if the home still forecloses the chances are that maintenance has not been carried out for some time on the home. Include the costs of bring maintenance up-to-date in your investment research.

What this might include will depend on the property. Some just need some gentle manicuring, while others have underlying structural damage that is prohibitively expensive to fix. It is true that homes in need of some tender lover and care will come at a discount, but it is important to make sure you can afford the cost of providing it.

Related posts:

  1. Deed In Lieu of Foreclosure, The Last Resort Loan Modification
  2. My Loan Modification Failed, How Soon Can I Buy A New Home After A Foreclosure
  3. Underwater Mortgages and the Science of the Perfect Loan Modification

Related posts:

  1. Deed In Lieu of Foreclosure, The Last Resort Loan Modification
  2. My Loan Modification Failed, How Soon Can I Buy A New Home After A Foreclosure
  3. Underwater Mortgages and the Science of the Perfect Loan Modification

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Good news, Boeing Co (BA)

Friday’s good news economic data point comes from the world’s best commercial airplane manufacturer, The Boeing Company (BA), which announced it will boost production of its largest airplane to meet increasing demand.

Boeing said the production rate of the 777 will return to seven per month in mid-2011, instead of early-2012. Further, production of the jumbo jet standard, the 747, will increase to two a month, from about 1 ½ per month, starting in mid-2012, instead of mid-2013.

Continue reading Ray of Light: Boeing to Boost 747, 777 Production to Meet Rising Demand

Ray of Light: Boeing to Boost 747, 777 Production to Meet Rising Demand originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 19 Mar 2010 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Loan Modifications have taken over the financial news in the last year. This is not at all surprising, with over 11.3 million people, nearly 25 per cent of all homes, with underwater mortgages; this is an issue that has the nation’s attention.

This makes any research into the issue of loan modifications and their effect on foreclosure of great interest to borrowers, banks, and the government.

One professor whose research has received a lot of attention is Sanjiv Ranjan Das, from the University of Santa Clara in California. Last year Das attacked the underwater issue, this refers to borrowers whose mortgage balances are larger than the market value of their homes. The underwater issue is one of the big problems the United States housing market has to deal with.

Professor Sanjiv Ranjan Das had a large and interested audience to his research; one big fan was his namesake Sanjiv Das, a top executive at CitiMortgage, the fourth biggest bank in the US, lender and servicer of over seven hundred billion dollars in mortgages.

Interestingly, these two men, one a professor and the other a banker, share more than just a name. Not least among the things they have in common is an education at the Indian Institute of Management.

Now they are working together on research that seeks to explain the behavior of borrowers that are stuck with underwater homes, unemployment and mortgage payments they cannot afford.

Interestingly the partnership between the two Das, began when the professor started receiving emails meant for the CitiMortgage Das. However, the accidental emails were great for the research of Santa Clara’s professor.

According to Das’ research the perfect or optimal loan modification includes an element of forgiving some of the balance in the loan. This is not easy for bankers to accept. Reducing the balance of the loan increases the speed at which the bank must accept losses and there is the added fear that it will create a counterproductive culture among borrowers.

However research has shown that re-defaulting on mortgages is much higher among borrowers that do not receive a reduction of their mortgage balance. This is because having an underwater home, a house with negative equity, makes many homeowners feel there is no financial sense in keeping their homes. However, when a principal reduction is carried out, even if only a modest one, re-defaulting on mortgages is sharply reduced.

Nevertheless lenders still shy away from this radical loan modification method and prefer using interest rate reductions and term extensions to reduce the monthly payments of troubled homeowners.

The good news is that the research carried out is getting the attention of the right people. The more is studied about the effects of income shock, or wealth shock, on troubled borrowers the more effective loan modifications and debt management as whole will be.

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modification Alternative by CitiGroup: Refinancing 30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgages
  2. Captain Obvious: Piggyback mortgages make loan modification harder
  3. Loan Modification Alternatives: Wells Fargo Interest Only Loans

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modification Alternative by CitiGroup: Refinancing 30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgages
  2. Captain Obvious: Piggyback mortgages make loan modification harder
  3. Loan Modification Alternatives: Wells Fargo Interest Only Loans

Source [blownmortgage]

On Friday the California Employment Development Department released preliminary figures on California unemployment. As it turns out, the unemployment problem ran deeper in 2009 than many had initially thought.  The current unemployment rate is 12.5 percent which means the underemployment rate for the state is probably closer to 23 percent.  Mix that in with Alt-A […]

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On Friday the California Employment Development Department released preliminary figures on California unemployment. As it turns out, the unemployment problem ran deeper in 2009 than many had initially thought.  The current unemployment rate is 12.5 percent which means the underemployment rate for the state is probably closer to 23 percent.  Mix that in with Alt-A and option ARM loans floating out in the market and you can understand why there are still problems in the California housing market.  The unemployment report is in sharp contrast to what is going on in Wall Street.  The stock market rallied even though we have yet to add one net job since the recession started.

The California budget is mired with systemic problems and many state and local government are going to be battling with cuts over the next couple of years even if the economy starts recovering.  If we actually look at unadjusted unemployment figures, the unemployment rate for Los Angeles County and California is a stunning 13.2 percent:

Source:  EDD

Very few of us have ever seen an unemployment rate this high for the region.  And we are starting to see some aggressive price cutting from banks in some select mid-tier markets to reflect this lower wage economy.  It is hard to tell what is going on internally on the balance sheet of many banks but it isn’t good.

Today we’ll look at what I would consider a mid-tier city in Los Angeles County that is starting to see some aggressive price cuts.  Today we salute you La Mirada with our Real Homes of Genius Award.

Half Off From 2006

La Mirada like many cities in Los Angeles County saw a massive jump in housing prices.  When prices were out of reach in other locations La Mirada was considered a good middle class place to buy a modest home.  This seemed to be enough to justify massive increases in prices.  The median price peak was reached late in the spring of 2007:

June 2007:           $555,000 (median La Mirada home price)

In that month, 40 homes were sold in the city.  Today the stats look a bit different:

January 2010:     $380,000 (median La Mirada home price)

In January 25 homes sold.  Now, much of this of course has to do with it being winter but a 31 percent price cut in less than three years is significant.  Yet prices are still too high given the household demographics.  We’ll get into that in a minute.  First let us examine the home above in better detail.

The above home is a 4 bedrooms and 1 bath home.  It is listed at 1,312 square feet and was built in 1953.  When I go into the history of California housing this was one of those massive building boom times.  This home was purchased near the peak back in 2006.  This home was financed with toxic mortgages up to the very common 100 percent mark:

Let us run the numbers.  The home was purchased for $514,000 with an 80/20 setup:

1st mortgage:     $411,200 (80%)

2nd mortgage:    $102,800 (20%)

Now I know some of you are stunned about this but this was very common in California.  In fact, those toxic option ARMs were being handed out like Pez candy.  The notice of default was filed back in December of 2008, then in March of 2009 the NTS was filed.  It took another nine months from that point for this home to go into bank owned status.  The home hit the MLS on 1/19/2010.

But here is where I’m noticing some reality based pricing.  Back even a few months ago, you would see bank owned homes hit the market at outrageous prices and banks simply sat back and did nothing.  On some areas and some homes, pricing seems to be aggressive on the downside.  Take a look at this place:

Price Reduced: 03/03/10 — $284,900 to $259,900

A 50 percent haircut from the 2006 peak price.  Before you jump up and down this is exactly what we’ve been talking about.  It seems like in some markets banks are being more realistic with their pricing.  And they should be.  Take a look at the household demographics for the city:

So let us run the FHA insured loan numbers here since at the current price, it clearly meets the criteria (4 out of 10 homes sold in SoCal were FHA backed last month).

3.5% down payment:     $9,096

The median household family bringing $61,000 is taking home roughly $3,900 net per month.  So roughly 43 percent of net pay is going to the home payment.  Does this make sense?  It would seem a bit high but it is certainly more in line than other areas and certainly far from the bubble peak.  And this is now the next phase and I expect to see more of this going forward.  We went from areas in the Inland Empire seeing big haircuts, to lower priced L.A. County areas, and now we are seeing certain mid-tier cities cut prices aggressively.  In my book, a 50 percent cut is significant.

Should you rush out and buy a home?  No.  If the numbers work and you find a home you like, go for it.  Yet the reality is, if L.A. County has a headline unemployment rate of 13.2 percent then the unemployment and underemployment rate is closer to 24 percent.  In other words, 1 out of 4 people in L.A. County are either out of work or working part-time for economic reasons.  Does that really sound like a healthy market?  Frankly, many people are focusing on their career and employment and are putting aside the Wall Street and real estate industry obsession with housing as the center of the universe.  Without solid employment, home prices will still go lower.  And keep in mind the current household income figures are based on 2008 Census figures and we won’t have more up to date data until September of 2010.  In other words, the income data is much worse than it appears.

And about that shadow inventory?  Let us take a quick look.  The MLS currently lists the following for La Mirada:

Non-distress:     45

Short Sales:        28

Foreclosures:     13

And this is what is lurking on the bank balance sheet:

Pre-foreclosure (NOD):                 124

Scheduled for Auction:                  188

Bank Owned:                                     39

Some had a question about double counting but these are all unique properties, nothing is double counted in the above data except for the 13 MLS foreclosures from the 39 bank owned properties.  86 properties on the MLS and 351 properties in distress.  This above home is one of those “trickle” down homes that is supposedly going to make the market better because we won’t see a flood.   A 50 percent price cut sure doesn’t seem like prices are going to boom as some in the housing industry would like you to believe and even with a drip strategy for the shadow inventory, prices will still come down to reflect economic reality.  And why would it matter how properties are released onto the market?  The distress is as plain as day.  Just look at the above stats.  People with a NOD, auction scheduled, and losing their homes are not in a stellar financial position.  People now have to go with government backed mortgages and even though these are easy to get, they are based on verifying income.  And with 13.2 percent of L.A. unemployed that is proving to be a challenge in itself.

Today we salute you La Mirada with our Real Homes of Genius Award.

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Filed under: Competitive Strategy, Microsoft (MSFT)

Readers of this space may recall that about two weeks ago I wrote about an intriguing turn of events for Microsoft Corp. (MSFT). Pursuant to an agreement with the European Commission, Microsoft has made available to it’s new European customers a web page which provides those customers download utilities for a choice of twelve different web browser applications. As I suggested then, It appears that the reign of Windows Internet Explorer may come to a screeching halt.

According to a report from BBC News, a web browsing application known as Opera is knocking Internet Explorer back on it’s heels in Europe. Opera Software of Norway states that downloads of it’s web browsing software have doubled in some countries since the Microsoft provided selection page came on line. Anywhere from 60% to 75% of the new download requests for Opera have come via the new Microsoft provided service.

Continue reading Microsoft Customers Go to Opera

Microsoft Customers Go to Opera originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Fri, 19 Mar 2010 11:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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