Friday, February 29, 2008
First Stocks, Then Real Estate, Now Oil?
Sprint Loses $29.5 Billion
$29.5 billion!! Another useless acquisition by another idiot executive. Perhaps Sprint should concentrate on improving its crappy customer service (yes, I will probably be one of the 1.2 million who leaves this quarter when my contract expires).
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Home Price Declines
The biggest annual declines were seen in the former bubble areas in Florida and the Southwest. Home prices in Miami were down 17.5% in the past year, while prices fell 15.3% in Phoenix and Las Vegas. Phoenix had the largest decline in December, falling 3.5%, followed by San Diego at 3.4% (down 15% for the year) and San Francisco at 3.2% (down 10.8% for the year). But even in non-bubble cities, such as Atlanta, Cleveland, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit and Minneapolis, prices are dropping. Detroit, down 13.6%; Minneapolis, down 8%; Cleveland, down 6.3%; Chicago, down 4.5%; Atlanta, down 3.4%; Dallas, down 2.4%. Other major cities: Los Angeles, down 13.7%; Washington, down 9.4%; New York, down 5.6%; Boston, down 3.4%.
Visa going public
Monday, February 25, 2008
Stay out of my wallet, Congress!
Well, excuse me if I sound callous, but aren't many of these "families" actually flippers who bought, refinanced, sold and re-bought their way into outsized profits while I took the safe route? Now that the pyramid scheme has collapsed on them, the gummit wants to pick my pocket to bail them (and their bankers) out? To be fair, maybe they are talking about the folks who lied about their income (sometimes by 50%+) to qualify for Alt-A mortgages they couldn't afford? No? Perhaps they are talking about the folks who got interest only loans (or even negative amortization loans) because when they rates kicked up "they would definitely be making more money" and/or "real estate always goes up"?
Not sure how any of this is MY problem. As one of my professors used to say many years ago, "Lack of planning on YOUR part does not constitute an emergency on MY part."
More Bad News From Citi
Friday, February 15, 2008
Failed muni auctions
GM $38.7 Billion Loss
Monday, February 11, 2008
DJIA Changes
Friday, February 01, 2008
Option ARMs
If the story is trying to evoke sympathy for Mr Rose, it fails miserably. He didn't know what he was signing? He didn't know he couldn't afford a $439K mortgage on an annual income of $16K? I'm sure he took cash out (probably several years worth of income) when he refinanced; he didn't understand he'd have to pay it back? Did he think the mortgage fairy was giving away money? Gimme an effin' break!
Microsoft bids $45B for Yahoo
News of the Day
Merrill Lynch's new CEO, John Thain, announced the firm will leave the subprime, CDO and structured credit businesses. In related news, Merrill Lynch agreed to pay $13.9 million to settle a dispute with the city of Springfield MA over CDOs that sank in value. Merrill said it agreed to reimburse Springfield after finding the city did not expressly consent to the CDO purchase. I'm sure there's more news like that in Merrill's future.
John Mack, CEO of Morgan Stanley, said the firm will stick with proprietary trading, despite trading losses that resulted in a $9.4 billion fourth-quarter writedown. It's a risky strategy for Morgan Stanley, which may face as much as $2 billion in additional writedowns for the current quarter.
Pershing Square manager William Ackman warned that the bond insurance industry might suffer crippling losses and has bet against the insurers' shares. He said MBIA and the Ambac Financial Group might lose $24 billion on the securitized mortgage investments they have guaranteed, a loss that could set off a chain reaction.
Motorola may be divesting the cellular phone business that represents half its revenue. This division has been beset with problems for the better part of a decade. The market actually greeted this news by driving Motorola stock higher; apparently the smaller company is expected to be more profitable.